High performance of carbon nanotube refrigerators over a large temperature span
Tatiana Naomi Yamamoto Silva, Alexandre F. Fonseca

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that carbon nanotubes exhibit a strong elastocaloric effect, making them promising for nanoscale refrigeration over a broad temperature range with high efficiency and stable performance.
Contribution
The paper provides the first atomistic simulation analysis of the elastocaloric effect in carbon nanotubes across a wide temperature span, assessing their potential as solid-state nanoscale refrigerators.
Findings
CNTs show a non-linear elastocaloric temperature change with a minimum around 30 K.
The coefficient of performance remains approximately 8 across temperatures.
Efficiency weakly depends on CNT diameter and chirality, not on length.
Abstract
Compression of greenhouse gases still dominates the market of refrigeration devices. Although well stablished and efficient, this technology is neither safe for the environment nor able to be scaled down to nanoscale. Solid-state cooling technologies are being developed to overcome these limitations, including studies at nanoscale. Among them, the so-called elastocaloric effect (eC) consists of the thermal response, , of a material under strain deformation. In this work, fully atomistic molecular dynamics simulations of the eC in carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are presented over a large temperature span. The efficiency of the CNTs as solid refrigerators is investigated by simulating their eC in a model of refrigerator machine running under Otto-like thermodynamic cycles (two adiabatic expansion/contraction plus two isochoric heat exchange processes) operating at temperatures,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Carbon Nanotubes in Composites
