Electrocaloric cooling system utilizing latent heat transfer for high power density

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Abstract

Electrocalorics (EC) is potentially more efficient than refrigeration and heat pumps based on compressors and does not need detrimental fluids. Current EC-prototypes use solid-state contact or forced convection with liquids to transfer the heat generated from the EC-material, which inhibits high cycle frequencies and thus limits power density. Here we present a heatpipe system solution, where the heat transfer is realized through condensation and evaporation of ethanol as a heat transfer fluid. Our prototype with lead scandium tantalate (PST) EC-material working at 5 Hz shows a specific cooling power of 1.5 W g−1. This is one order of magnitude more than previously reported for ceramic EC-prototypes. Overcoming the limits of slow heat transfer is essential to reach high specific cooling powers enabling a future commercial success of the technology.

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Metzdorf, J., Corhan, P., Bach, D., Hirose, S., Lellinger, D., Mönch, S., … Bartholomé, K. (2024). Electrocaloric cooling system utilizing latent heat transfer for high power density. Communications Engineering, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s44172-024-00199-z

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