Designing magnetocaloric materials for hydrogen liquefaction with light rare-earth Laves phases
Wei Liu, Tino Gottschall, Franziska Scheibel, Eduard Bykov, Nuno, Fortunato, Alex Aubert, Hongbin Zhang, Konstantin Skokov, and Oliver, Gutfleisch

TL;DR
This paper proposes a method to design light rare-earth-based magnetocaloric materials with tunable Curie temperatures near 20 K, aiming to improve hydrogen liquefaction efficiency while reducing resource dependency.
Contribution
It introduces a mean-field approach to tailor light rare-earth intermetallics for cryogenic magnetocaloric applications, specifically targeting hydrogen liquefaction.
Findings
Tuning $T_C$ enhances magnetocaloric effects near 20 K.
Mixing Nd and Pr in $(Nd,Pr)Al_2$ achieves large effects at 20 K.
Designed alloys are competitive with heavy rare-earth compounds.
Abstract
Magnetocaloric hydrogen liquefaction could be a "game-changer" for liquid hydrogen industry. Although heavy rare-earth-based magnetocaloric materials show strong magnetocaloric effects in the temperature range required by hydrogen liquefaction (77 ~ 20 K), the high resource criticality of the heavy rare-earth elements is a major obstacle for upscaling this emerging liquefaction technology. In contrast, the higher abundances of the light rare-earth elements make their alloys highly appealing for magnetocaloric hydrogen liquefaction. Via a mean-field approach, it is demonstrated that tuning the Curie temperature () of an idealized light rare-earth-based magnetocaloric material towards lower cryogenic temperatures leads to larger maximum magnetic and adiabatic temperature changes ( and ). Especially in the vicinity of the condensation point of hydrogen (20…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic Bearings and Levitation Dynamics · Magnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials · Metallurgical and Alloy Processes
