Influence of Gd-rich precipitates on the martensitic transformation, magnetocaloric effect and mechanical properties of Ni-Mn-In Heusler alloys -- A comparative study
Franziska Scheibel, Wei Liu, Lukas Pfeuffer, Navid Shayanfar, Andreas, Taubel, Konstantin P. Skokov, Stefan Riegg, Yuye Wu, Oliver Gutfleisch

TL;DR
This study compares Gd-rich precipitates and grain refinement effects on the mechanical, magnetic, and caloric properties of Ni-Mn-In Heusler alloys, showing that precipitates enhance strength while maintaining magnetocaloric performance.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Gd precipitates improve mechanical stability with minimal impact on magnetocaloric effects, highlighting the roles of precipitates and grain size.
Findings
Gd precipitates double mechanical strength
Magnetocaloric properties are preserved with Gd doping
Grain refinement significantly contributes to mechanical stability
Abstract
A multi-stimuli cooling cycle can be used to increase the cyclic caloric performance of multicaloric materials like Ni-Mn-In Heusler alloys. However, the use of a uniaxial compressive stress as an additional external stimulus to a magnetic field requires good mechanical stability. Improvement of mechanical stability and strength by doping has been shown in several studies. However, doping is always accompanied by grain refinement and a change in transition temperature. This raises the question of the extent to which mechanical strength is related to grain refinement, transition temperature, or precipitates. This study shows a direct comparison between a single-phase Ni-Mn-Sn and a two-phase Gd-doped Ni-Mn-In alloy with the same transition temperature and grain size. It is shown that the excellent magnetocaloric properties of the Ni-Mn-In matrix are maintained with doping. The isothermal…
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.
