Materials & Design (Sep 2024)
Impact of magnetic, atomic and microstructural ordering on the magnetocaloric performance of powdered NiCoMnSn metamagnetic shape memory ribbons
Abstract
Co-doped NiMnSn Heusler-type metamagnetic shape memory alloys (MMSMAs) are promising materials for the next-generation solid-state refrigeration systems due to their excellent magnetocaloric performance around the martensitic transformation, which is easily tuneable by slight changes in the alloy composition. An improvement in the thermal efficiency of active magnetic regenerator devices, a key element in magnetocaloric cooling systems, arises by obtaining powdered magnetocaloric alloys that meet technical requirements for their implementation as a feedstock material in the additive manufacturing of 3D-printed heat exchangers. In the present work, powders of Mn-rich NiCoMnSn Heusler-type MMSMAs were obtained from their ribbon form avoiding or minimizing residual stresses, the number of defects and disorder in the crystal lattice and microstructure. Since atomic order and crystallographic structure are crucial in the transformation and magnetic properties of these alloys, a complementary structural analysis of the powders after different heat treatments was performed by powder neutron diffraction. The results show that the cubic austenitic phase of the non-heat-treated melt-spun powder exhibits a highly stressed structure, which leads to an incomplete martensitic transformation and, therefore, to the coexistence of martensitic and austenitic phases at low temperatures. The magnetic structure of the austenite phase was also determined by neutron powder diffraction, obtaining a ferromagnetic coupling between 4a and 4b Wyckoff positions in the samples analysed. It was found that a heat treatment facilitates the martensitic transformation and enables the formation of a pure martensitic phase.The observed changes in the magnetocaloric performance of the powders have been understood in terms of the differently stressed structures and their impact on the martensitic transformation. A fully completed structural transformation leads to a significant increase of the magnetisation change across the martensitic transformation and, consequently, to high values of both a magnetic field induced isothermal entropy change and refrigeration capacity.