
Caloric Solid-State Magnetocaloric Cooling: Physical Phenomenon, Thermodynamic Cycles and Materials
Author(s) -
Adriana Greco,
Adriana R. Farina,
Claudia Masselli
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
tecnica italiana
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0040-1846
DOI - 10.18280/ti-ijes.650109
Subject(s) - magnetic refrigeration , regenerative heat exchanger , refrigerant , refrigeration , materials science , thermodynamics , magnetic field , thermodynamic cycle , adiabatic process , refrigerator car , mechanical engineering , heat exchanger , magnetization , engineering , physics , quantum mechanics
Magnetic refrigeration is a promising and ecologic technology, alternative to the conventional vapor-compression refrigeration by the employment of solid-state materials as refrigerants instead of the fluid-state ones, own of vapour compression refrigeration. This emerging technology bases its operation on the MagnetoCaloric Effect (MCE), which is a physical phenomenon, related to solid-state materials with magnetic properties. For materials displaying simple magnetic ordering (i.e. paramagnetic to ferromagnetic phase transformations) a rapid increase in magnetic field causes a temperature rise in the material; likewise, a rapid reduction in the field causes cooling. This variation in temperature is called adiabatic temperature change. In 1982 the Active Magnetic Regenerative refrigeration cycle, well known as AMR cycle was introduced. The innovative idea considers a magnetic Brayton cycle but the main innovation consists of introducing the AMR regenerator concept, i.e. the employment of the magnetic material itself both as refrigerant and as regenerator. A secondary fluid is used to transfer heat from the cold to the hot end of the regenerator. Substantially every section of the regenerator experiments its own AMR cycle, according to the proper working temperature. Through an AMR one can appreciate a larger temperature span among the ends of the regenerator.