4.7 Article

Long-Term Stable Elastocaloric Effect in a Heusler-Type Co51V33Ga16 Polycrystalline Alloy

Journal

ACS APPLIED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume 5, Issue 10, Pages 12953-12965

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsaem.2c02567

Keywords

elastocaloric effect; shape memory alloys; stress-induced martensitic transformation; superelastic effect; cyclic stability

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52171005]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China [N2202002, N2102006]
  3. Liaoning Revitalization Talents Program [XLYC1907082]
  4. 111 Project of China 2.0 [BP0719037]
  5. State Key Laboratory of Advanced Metals and Materials [2021-ZD05]
  6. Key Laboratory for Anisotropy and Texture of Materials (Education Ministry of China) [ATM202201]

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This study demonstrates the large elastocaloric effect and long-term cyclic stability achieved in a Huesler-type Co51V33Ga16 polycrystalline alloy. The alloy shows large adiabatic temperature change values over a wide temperature range and maintains a low degradation rate during superelastic cycles, outperforming previously reported Huesler-type alloys.
Cyclic stability is of utmost importance for the long-term work of caloric materials in solid-state refrigeration. Heusler-type shape memory alloys show a large elastocaloric effect under low driving stress, but their intrinsic brittleness always leads to poor cyclic stability. Here, we demonstrate the simultaneously achieved large elastocaloric effect and long-term cyclic stability in a Heusler-type Co51V33Ga16 polycrystal-line alloy. Over a wide temperature range of 290-340 K, large adiabatic temperature change (Delta Tad) values of -6.0 to -10.9 K can be obtained upon fast unloading. Moreover, by synthetically considering the influences of deformation parameters on the Delta Tad values, stress hysteresis, energy dissipation, and temporary residual strain to balance cooling capacity and cyclability, large Delta Tad values higher than 6.0 K are maintained for more than 50 000 superelastic cycles performed under the compressive strain of 3.5% and strain rate of 1.1 x 10-2 s-1, showing a very low degradation rate of 2 x 10-5 K per cycle. Such cyclic stability of elastocaloric effect well outperforms those reported in Heusler-type alloys so far.

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