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Development of Magnetocaloric Microstructures from Equiatomic Iron–Rhodium Nanoparticles through Laser Sintering

Tahir, Shabbir ; Landers, Joachim ; Salamon, Soma ; Koch, David ; Doñate‐Buendía, Carlos ; Ziefuß, Anna R. ; Wende, Heiko ; Gökce, Bilal (2024)
Development of Magnetocaloric Microstructures from Equiatomic Iron–Rhodium Nanoparticles through Laser Sintering.
In: Advanced Engineering Materials, 2023, 25 (20)
doi: 10.26083/tuprints-00027254
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Item Type: Article
Type of entry: Secondary publication
Title: Development of Magnetocaloric Microstructures from Equiatomic Iron–Rhodium Nanoparticles through Laser Sintering
Language: English
Date: 21 May 2024
Place of Publication: Darmstadt
Year of primary publication: October 2023
Place of primary publication: Weinheim
Publisher: Wiley-VCH
Journal or Publication Title: Advanced Engineering Materials
Volume of the journal: 25
Issue Number: 20
Collation: 10 Seiten
DOI: 10.26083/tuprints-00027254
Corresponding Links:
Origin: Secondary publication DeepGreen
Abstract:

Pronounced magnetocaloric effects are typically observed in materials that often contain expensive and rare elements and are therefore costly to mass produce. However, they can rather be exploited on a small scale for miniaturized devices such as magnetic micro coolers, thermal sensors, and magnetic micropumps. Herein, a method is developed to generate magnetocaloric microstructures from an equiatomic iron–rhodium (FeRh) bulk target through a stepwise process. First, paramagnetic near‐to‐equiatomic solid‐solution FeRh nanoparticles (NPs) are generated through picosecond (ps)‐pulsed laser ablation in ethanol, which are then transformed into a printable ink and patterned using a continuous wave laser. Laser patterning not only leads to sintering of the NP ink but also triggers the phase transformation of the initial γ‐ to B2‐FeRh. At a laser fluence of 246 J cm⁻², a partial (52%) phase transformation from γ‐ to B2‐FeRh is obtained, resulting in a magnetization increase of 35 Am² kg⁻¹ across the antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic phase transition. This represents a ca. sixfold enhancement compared to previous furnace‐annealed FeRh ink. Finally, herein, the ability is demonstrated to create FeRh 2D structures with different geometries using laser sintering of magnetocaloric inks, which offers advantages such as micrometric spatial resolution, in situ annealing, and structure design flexibility.

Uncontrolled Keywords: antiferromagnetic-ferromagnetic phase transition, iron-rhodium, laser ablation in liquid, laser sintering, micro cooling
Identification Number: Artikel-ID: 2300245
Status: Publisher's Version
URN: urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-272545
Classification DDC: 500 Science and mathematics > 540 Chemistry
600 Technology, medicine, applied sciences > 660 Chemical engineering
Divisions: 11 Department of Materials and Earth Sciences > Material Science > Structure Research
Date Deposited: 21 May 2024 13:41
Last Modified: 23 May 2024 10:28
SWORD Depositor: Deep Green
URI: https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/id/eprint/27254
PPN: 51847013X
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