Abstract

The solid-state cooling technique utilizing electrocaloric (EC) materials is an alternative approach to tackle the greenhouse effect caused by traditional vapor-compression refrigeration. However, such a promising technique is severely hampered by the lack of proper materials considering that most existing EC materials with a single positive/negative EC effect exhibit a limited cooling effect. Here, the coexistence of a positive and negative EC effects has been achieved in a lead-free Na0.5Bi0.5(Ti0.97W0.01Fe0.02)O3 ferroelectric film. A state-of-the-art positive adiabatic temperature change (ΔT) of ~56 K accompanied by an isothermal entropy change (ΔS) of ~64 J K−1 kg−1 at 143 °C and a large negative ΔT of ~ − 17 K with a ΔS of ~ − 24 J K−1 kg−1 at 55 °C are obtained under a strong electric field strength of 2692 kV cm−1. Oxygen vacancy-related defect dipoles play a critical role in the negative EC effect at lower temperatures, while the phase transition is responsible for the positive EC effect at higher temperatures. Meanwhile, the film exhibits a high EC strength with a maximum ΔT/ΔE of 0.021 K cm kV−1, together with a ΔS/ΔE of 0.024 J cm K−1 kg−1 kV−1. This work ensures a giant total temperature change by utilizing and combining both the negative and positive EC effects in a dual cooling process.

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