Ultrasensitive barocaloric material for room-temperature solid-state refrigeration.
Qingyong RenJi QiDehong YuZhe ZhangRuiqi SongWenli SongBao YuanTianhao WangWeijun RenZhidong ZhangXin TongBing LiPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
One of the greatest obstacles to the real application of solid-state refrigeration is the huge driving fields. Here, we report a giant barocaloric effect in inorganic NH 4 I with reversible entropy changes of [Formula: see text] ∼71 J K -1 kg -1 around room temperature, associated with a structural phase transition. The phase transition temperature, T t , varies dramatically with pressure at a rate of dT t /dP ∼0.79 K MPa -1 , which leads to a very small saturation driving pressure of ΔP ∼40 MPa, an extremely large barocaloric strength of [Formula: see text] ∼1.78 J K -1 kg -1 MPa -1 , as well as a broad temperature span of ∼41 K under 80 MPa. Comprehensive characterizations of the crystal structures and atomic dynamics by neutron scattering reveal that a strong reorientation-vibration coupling is responsible for the large pressure sensitivity of T t . This work is expected to advance the practical application of barocaloric refrigeration.