Distinct scaling behaviors of giant electrocaloric cooling performance in low-dimensional organic, relaxor and anti-ferroelectrics

Abstract

Electrocaloric (EC) materials show promise in eco-friendly solid-state refrigeration and integrable on-chip thermal management. While direct measurement of EC thin-films still remains challenging, a generic theoretical framework for quantifying the cooling properties of rich EC materials including normal-, relaxor-, organic- and anti-ferroelectrics is imperative for exploiting new flexible and room-temperature cooling alternatives. Here, we present a versatile theory that combines Master equation with Maxwell relations and analytically relates the macroscopic cooling responses in EC materials with the intrinsic diffuseness of phase transitions and correlation characteristics. Under increased electric fields, both EC entropy and adiabatic temperature changes increase quadratically initially, followed by further linear growth and eventual gradual saturation. The upper bound of entropy change (dSmax) is limited by distinct correlation volumes (Vcr) and transition diffuseness. The linearity between Vcr and the transition diffuseness is emphasized, while dSmax=300 kJ/(K.m3) is obtained for Pb0.8Ba0.2ZrO3. The dSmax in antiferroelectric Pb0.95Zr0.05TiO3, Pb0.8Ba0.2ZrO3 and polymeric ferroelectrics scales proportionally with Vcr(-2.2), owing to the one-dimensional structural constraint on lattice-scale depolarization dynamics; whereas dSmax in relaxor and normal ferroelectrics scales as dSmax ~ Vcr(-0.37), which tallies with a dipolar interaction exponent of 2/3 in EC materials and the well-proven fractional dimensionality of 2.5 for ferroelectric domain walls.

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