Applicability of scaling behavior and power laws in the analysis of the magnetocaloric effect in second-order phase transition materials
Carlos Romero-Mu\~niz, Ryo Tamura, Shu Tanaka, and Victorino Franco

TL;DR
This study assesses the limits of universal scaling laws in magnetocaloric materials across models and experiments, demonstrating their applicability up to significant magnetic field strengths near room temperature.
Contribution
It provides a model-independent analysis of the applicability range of scaling laws in magnetocaloric materials using mean-field, experimental, and 3D-Ising models.
Findings
Scaling laws are valid up to 8% of thermal energy at Curie temperature.
Deviations from scaling laws are within experimental error margins.
Scaling laws are applicable at magnetic fields up to 10 T near room temperature.
Abstract
In recent years, universal scaling has gained renewed attention in the study of magnetocaloric materials. It has been applied to a wide variety of pure elements and compounds, ranging from rare earth-based materials to transition metal alloys, from bulk crystalline samples to nanoparticles. It is therefore necessary to quantify the limits within which the scaling laws would remain applicable for magnetocaloric research. For this purpose, a threefold approach has been followed: a) the magnetocaloric responses of a set of materials with Curie temperatures ranging from 46 to 336 K have been modeled with a mean-field Brillouin model, b) experimental data for Gd has been analyzed, and c) a 3D-Ising model ---which is beyond the mean-field approximation--- has been studied. In this way we can demonstrate that the conclusions extracted in this work are model-independent. It is found that…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
