5 research outputs found
Dynamics in the ordered and disordered phases of barocaloric adamantane
High-entropy order-disorder phase transitions can be used for efficient and
eco-friendly barocaloric solid-state cooling. Here the barocaloric effect is
reported in an archetypal plastic crystal, adamantane. Adamantane has a
colossal isothermally reversible entropy change of 106 J K-1 kg-1 . Extremely
low hysteresis means that this can be accessed at pressure differences less
than 200 bar. Configurational entropy can only account for about 40% of the
total entropy change; the remainder is due to vibrational effects. Using
neutron spectroscopy and supercell lattice dynamics calculations, it is found
that this vibrational entropy change is mainly caused by softening in the
high-entropy phase of acoustic modes that correspond to molecular rotations. We
attribute this behaviour to the contrast between an 'interlocked' state in the
low-entropy phase and sphere-like behaviour in the high-entropy phase. Although
adamantane is a simple van der Waals solid with near-spherical molecules, this
approach can be leveraged for the design of more complex barocaloric molecular
crystals. Moreover, this study shows that supercell lattice dynamics
calculations can accurately map the effect of orientational disorder on the
phonon spectrum, paving the way for studying the vibrational entropy, thermal
conductivity, and other thermodynamic effects in more complex materials.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure