Simulation of the electrocaloric effect based on first-principles methods
Claudio Cazorla

TL;DR
This paper reviews first-principles simulation methods for the electrocaloric effect, highlighting their role in predicting and understanding solid-state cooling materials and guiding experimental efforts.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of first-principles approaches for simulating the electrocaloric effect, including protocols and representative examples.
Findings
First-principles methods can accurately estimate EC effects.
Simulation approaches guide experimental design.
Examples demonstrate predictive capabilities of the methods.
Abstract
Due to critical environmental and technological issues, there is a pressing need to switch from current refrigeration methods based on compression of gases to novel solid-state cooling technologies. Solid-state cooling is based on the thermal response of materials to external magnetic, electric, or mechanic fields, the so-called caloric effect. The electrocaloric (EC) effect, which is caused by electric fields and typically occurs in polar materials, is particularly promising from a technological point of view owing to its good scalability and natural implementation in circuitry. Simulation of EC effects represents an efficient and physically insightful strategy for advancing the field of solid-state cooling by complementing, and in some cases guiding, experiments. Theoretical estimation of EC effects can be achieved with different approaches ranging from computationally inexpensive but…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFerroelectric and Piezoelectric Materials · Magnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials · Semiconductor materials and devices
