English

Fatigue-resistant high-performance elastocaloric materials via additive manufacturing

Materials Science 2019-12-05 v1

Abstract

Elastocaloric cooling, which exploits the latent heat released and absorbed as stress-induced phase transformations are reversibly cycled in shape memory alloys, has recently emerged as a frontrunner in non-vapor-compression cooling technologies. The intrinsically high thermodynamic efficiency of elastocaloric materials is limited only by work hysteresis. Here, we report on creating high-performance low-hysteresis elastocaloric cooling materials via additive manufacturing of Titanium-Nickel (Ti-Ni) alloys. Contrary to established knowledge of the physical metallurgy of Ti-Ni alloys, intermetallic phases are found to be beneficial to elastocaloric performances when they are combined with the binary Ti-Ni compound in nanocomposite configurations. The resulting microstructure gives rise to quasi-linear stress-strain behaviors with extremely small hysteresis, leading to enhancement in the materials efficiency by a factor of five. Furthermore, despite being composed of more than 50% intermetallic phases, the reversible, repeatable elastocaloric performance of this material is shown to be stable over one million cycles. This result opens the door for direct implementation of additive manufacturing to elastocaloric cooling systems where versatile design strategy enables both topology optimization of heat exchangers as well as unique microstructural control of metallic refrigerants.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1908.07900,
  title  = {Fatigue-resistant high-performance elastocaloric materials via additive manufacturing},
  author = {Huilong Hou and Emrah Simsek and Tao Ma and Nathan S. Johnson and Suxin Qian and Cheikh Cisse and Drew Stasak and Naila Al Hasan and Lin Zhou and Yunho Hwang and Reinhard Radermacher and Valery I. Levitas and Matthew J. Kramer and Mohsen Asle Zaeem and Aaron P. Stebner and Ryan T. Ott and Jun Cui and Ichiro Takeuchi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1908.07900},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

38 pages, 3 figures, 8 supplementary figures, 1 supplementary table

R2 v1 2026-06-23T10:53:16.320Z