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Ultrasensitive barocaloric material for room-temperature solid-state refrigeration

Physics

Ultrasensitive barocaloric material for room-temperature solid-state refrigeration

Q. Ren, J. Qi, et al.

Discover the groundbreaking barocaloric effect in NH₄I, leading to reversible entropy changes and promising advancements for refrigeration technologies. This remarkable research was conducted by Qingyong Ren and colleagues.... show more
Abstract
One of the greatest obstacles to the real application of solid-state refrigeration is the huge driving fields. Here, we report a giant barocaloric effect in inorganic NH4I with reversible entropy changes of ΔSmaxP ~71 J K−1 kg−1 around room temperature, associated with a structural phase transition. The phase transition temperature, Tt, varies dramatically with pressure at a rate of dTt/dP ~0.79 K MPa−1, which leads to a very small saturation driving pressure of ΔP ~40 MPa, an extremely large barocaloric strength of ΔS/ΔP ~1.78 J K−1 kg−1 MPa−1, as well as a broad temperature span of ~41 K under 80 MPa. Comprehensive characterizations of the crystal structures and atomic dynamics by neutron scattering reveal that a strong reorientation-vibration coupling is responsible for the large pressure sensitivity of Tt. This work is expected to advance the practical application of barocaloric refrigeration.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Apr 28, 2022
Authors
Qingyong Ren, Ji Qi, Dehong Yu, Zhe Zhang, Ruiqi Song, Wenli Song, Bao Yuan, Tianhao Wang, Weijun Ren, Zhidong Zhang, Xin Tong, Bing Li
Tags
barocaloric effect
NH₄I
entropy changes
phase transition
refrigeration
neutron scattering
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