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Development of Power Electronics Based Test Platform for Characterization and Testing of Magnetocaloric Materials
Author(s) -
Deepak E. Soman,
Jelena Loncarski,
Lisa Gerdin,
Petter Eklund,
Sandra Eriksson,
Mats Leijon
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
advances in electrical engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2356-6655
pISSN - 2314-7636
DOI - 10.1155/2015/670624
Subject(s) - magnetic refrigeration , characterization (materials science) , mechanical engineering , refrigeration , materials science , magnet , power (physics) , magnetic field , power electronics , refrigerant , actuator , inverter , work (physics) , computer science , automotive engineering , electrical engineering , voltage , engineering , nanotechnology , thermodynamics , physics , gas compressor , magnetization , quantum mechanics
Magnetocaloric effects of various materials are getting more and more interesting for the future, as they can significantly contribute towards improving the efficiency of many energy intensive applications such as refrigeration, heating, and air conditioning. Accurate characterization of magnetocaloric effects, exhibited by various materials, is an important process for further studies and development of the suitable magnetocaloric heating and cooling solutions. The conventional test facilities have plenty of limitations, as they focus only on the thermodynamic side and use magnetic machines with moving bed of magnetocaloric material or magnet. In this work an entirely new approach for characterization of the magnetocaloric materials is presented, with the main focus on a flexible and efficient power electronic based excitation and a completely static test platform. It can generate a periodically varying magnetic field using superposition of an ac and a dc magnetic field. The scale down prototype uses a customized single phase H-bridge inverter with essential protections and an electromagnet load as actuator. The preliminary simulation and experimental results show good agreement and support the usage of the power electronic test platform for characterizing magnetocaloric materials

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