4.7 Article

Numerical study of a double-effect elastocaloric cooling system powered by low-grade heat

Journal

APPLIED THERMAL ENGINEERING
Volume 218, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2022.119302

Keywords

Solid-state cooling; Caloric cooling; Elastocaloric cooling; Heat-activated cooling; Solar cooling technology; Shape-memory alloy

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Elastocaloric cooling technology is a solid-state cooling technology that utilizes the latent heat associated with phase transformation to improve cooling efficiency. This study proposes a double-effect elastocaloric cooling cycle, which can increase the efficiency by three times through the proper design of phase transition temperatures.
Elastocaloric cooling technology is a novel solid-state cooling technology based on the latent heat associated with martensitic phase transformation in shape-memory alloys. Heat-driven elastocaloric cooling cycle could harvest low-grade thermal energy other than consuming electric power, and was proposed as a new direction in this field. To improve the heat-to-cooling efficiency of heat-driven elastocaloric cooling systems, a double-effect elastocaloric cooling cycle with two beds of actuator shape-memory alloys and two beds of refrigerant super-elastic alloys is proposed in this study. The double-effect cycle utilizes the input heat two times and thus provides improved efficiency. Numerical simulations are carried out to study the characteristics of the phase transformation in both the actuators and refrigerants. The impact of phase transition temperatures of the actuator alloys, the heat source temperature, and the operating parameters on the phase transformation and cooling performance of the system is investigated. If the phase transition temperatures are properly designed, the double-effect heat-driven elastocaloric cooling system is three times more efficient than the baseline single-effect heat-driven elastocaloric cooling system.

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