4.6 Article

Influence of magnetic field, chemical pressure and hydrostatic pressure on the structural and magnetocaloric properties of the Mn-Ni-Ge system

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 50, Issue 46, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6463/aa8e89

Keywords

magnetocaloric effect; MnNiGe; isostructural alloying; magnetic entropy change; adiabatic temperature change; barocaloric effect

Funding

  1. DFG [SPP 1599]

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The magnetic, structural and thermomagnetic properties of the MM'X material system of MnNiGe are evaluated with respect to their utilization in magnetocaloric refrigeration. The effects of separate and simultaneous substitution of Fe for Mn and Si on the Ge site are analysed in detail to highlight the benefits of the isostructural alloying method. A large range of compounds with precisely tunable structural and magnetic properties and the tuning of the phase transition by chemical pressure are compared to the effect of hydrostatic pressure on the martensitic transition. We obtained very large isothermal entropy changes Delta S-iso of up to - 37.8 J kg(-1) K-1 based on magnetic measurements for (Mn, Fe) NiGe in moderate fields of 2 T. The enhanced magnetocaloric properties for transitions around room temperature are demonstrated for samples with reduced Ge, a resource critical element. An adiabatic temperature change of 1.3 K in a magnetic field change of 1.93 T is observed upon direct measurement for a sample with Fe and Si substitution. However, the high volume change of 2.8% results in an embrittlement of large particles into several smaller fragments and leads to a sensitivity of the magnetocaloric properties towards sample shape and size. On the other hand, this large volume change enables to induce the phase transition with a large shift of the transition temperature by application of hydrostatic pressure (72 K GPa(-1)). Thus, the effect of 1.88 GPa is equivalent to a substitution of 10% Fe for Mn and can act as an additional stimulus to induce the phase transition and support the low magnetic field dependence of the phase transition temperature for multicaloric applications.

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