Abstract The powder-in-tube (PIT) technology was applied to La(Fe, Co, Si) 13 powder cladded by a thin seamless austenitic steel jacket. Wires appear to be promising in the search for… Click to show full abstract
Abstract The powder-in-tube (PIT) technology was applied to La(Fe, Co, Si) 13 powder cladded by a thin seamless austenitic steel jacket. Wires appear to be promising in the search for alternative regenerator geometries, since they offer various possibilities of arrangements allowing to optimise heat transfer and pressure loss within the boundaries set by parallel plate and sphere beds. Here, pre-alloyed La(Fe, Co, Si) 13 powder was filled in a AISI 316L austenitic steel tube and swaged to wires with an outer diameter of 1 mm. By mechanical deformation, the steel jacket thickness was reduced to about 100 μm surrounding the magnetocaloric core. A post-annealing of only 10 min at 1050 °C is sufficient to form the magnetocaloric NaZn 13 -type phase resulting in an entropy change close to the value of a pure reference sample. The presented technology is not limited to La(Fe, Co, Si) 13 /steel combination but can be extended to material pairs involving wire core materials with a first order transition, such as Fe 2 P-type or Heusler alloys.
               
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