Self-oscillating polymeric refrigerator with high energy efficiency.
Donglin HanYingjing ZhangCenling HuangShanyu ZhengDongyuan WuQiang LiFeihong DuHongxiao DuanWeilin ChenJunye ShiJiangping ChenGang LiuXin ChenXiaoshi QianPublished in: Nature (2024)
Electrocaloric 1,2 and electrostrictive 3,4 effects concurrently exist in dielectric materials. Combining these two effects could achieve the lightweight, compact localized thermal management that is promised by electrocaloric refrigeration 5 . Despite a handful of numerical models and schematic presentations 6,7 , current electrocaloric refrigerators still rely on external accessories to drive the working bodies 8-10 and hence result in a low device-level cooling power density and coefficient of performance (COP). Here we report an electrocaloric thin-film device that uses the electro-thermomechanical synergy provided by polymeric ferroelectrics. Under one-time a.c. electric stimulation, the device is thermally and mechanically cycled by the working body itself, resulting in an external-driver-free, self-cycling, soft refrigerator. The prototype offers a directly measured cooling power density of 6.5 W g -1 and a peak COP exceeding 58 under a zero temperature span. Being merely a 30-µm-thick polymer film, the device achieved a COP close to 24 under a 4 K temperature span in an open ambient environment (32% thermodynamic efficiency). Compared with passive cooling, the thin-film refrigerator could immediately induce an additional 17.5 K temperature drop against an electronic chip. The soft, polymeric refrigerator can sense, actuate and pump heat to provide automatic localized thermal management.