Abstract
The development of magnetocaloric materials represents an approach to enable efficient and environmentally friendly refrigeration. It is envisioned as a key technology to reduce CO2 emissions of air conditioning and cooling systems. Fe-Rh has been shown to be one of the best-suited materials in terms of heat exchange per material volume. However, the Fe-Rh magnetocaloric response depends on its composition. Hence, the adaptation of material processing routes that preserve the Fe-Rh magnetocaloric response in the generated structures is a fundamental step towards the industrial development of this cooling technology. To address this challenge, the temperature-dependent properties of laser synthesized Fe-Rh nanoparticles and the laser printing of Fe-Rh nanoparticle inks are studied to generate 2D magnetocaloric structures that are potentially interesting for applications such as waste heat management of compact electrical appliances or thermal diodes, switches, and printable magnetocaloric media. The magnetization and temperature dependence of the ink’s γ-FeRh to B2-FeRh magnetic transition is analyzed throughout the complete process, finding a linear increase of the magnetization M (0.8 T, 300 K) up to 96 Am2/kg with ca. 90% of the γ-FeRh being transformed permanently into the B2-phase. In 2D structures, magnetization values of M (0.8 T, 300 K) ≈ 11 Am2/kg could be reached by laser sintering, yielding partial conversion to the B2-phase equivalent to long-time heating temperature of app. 600 K, via this treatment. Thus, the proposed procedure constitutes a robust route to achieve the generation of magnetocaloric structures.
Highlights
The development of magnetocaloric materials represents an approach to enable efficient and environmentally friendly refrigeration
It is hypothesized that this lattice constant reduction of app. 2% can be explained by the temperature-induced removal of hydrogen from the lattice, which could have been incorporated during the synthesis due to the presence of acetone, a hydrogen-containing solution, explaining the higher original lattice parameter
We conclude that the metastable γ-Fe50Rh50 nanoparticles produced by laser ablation in liquid can be processed into the stable B2-phase by annealing
Summary
The development of magnetocaloric materials represents an approach to enable efficient and environmentally friendly refrigeration. Temperature-dependent x-ray diffraction (XRD), magnetometry, and Mössbauer spectroscopy analyses were performed to observe and characterize the phase transition of the LAL synthesized FeRh nanoparticles.
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