Crystals (Aug 2021)
Thermoelastic Properties and Elastocaloric Effect in Rapidly Quenched Ribbons of Ti<sub>2</sub>NiCu Alloy in the Amorphous and Crystalline State
Abstract
The thermoelastic properties and the elastocaloric effect (ECE) were studied in rapidly quenched ribbons of the Ti2NiCu alloy samples in amorphous and crystalline states under periodic mechanical tension with a frequency of up to 50 Hz. In the amorphous samples, elastic behavior is observed, described by Hooke’s law, with a high coefficient of thermal expansion α = 1.7 × 10−4 K−1. Polycrystalline ribbons of the Ti2NiCu alloy have the classical shape memory effect (SME), the temperatures of the forward and reverse thermoelastic martensitic transitions being Ms = 345 K, Mf = 325 K, As = 332 K, and Af = 347 K and the coefficient of the dependence of the transition temperature on mechanical stress being β = 0.12 K/MPa. The experimentally measured value of the adiabatic temperature change under the action of mechanical stress (ECE) in the amorphous state of the alloy at room temperature (Tr = 300 K) was ΔT = −2 K, with a relative elongation of ε = 1.5% and a mechanical stress of σ = 243 MPa. For crystalline samples of Ti2NiCu alloy ribbons, the ECE is maximum near the completion temperature of the reverse thermoelastic martensitic transformation Af, and its value was 21 K and 7 K under cyclic mechanical loads of 300 and 100 MPa, respectively. It is shown that the ECE value does not depend on the frequency of external action in the range from 0 to 50 Hz. The specific power of the rapidly quenched ribbon was evaluated as a converter of thermal energy at an external mechanical stress of 100 MPa; its value was 175 W/g at a frequency of 50 Hz. The thermodynamic model based on the Landau theory of phase transitions well explains the properties of both amorphous ribbons (reverse ECE) and alloy ribbons with EPF (direct ECE).
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