A new physics discovery led by an Indian-origin scientist may lead to more efficient refrigerators that use less electricity and are cooled not by chemical refrigerants, but by magnetism.
The discovery by a University of Virginia-led team may also lead to more efficient heat pumps and airport scanners, perhaps within a decade.
The scientists discovered a universal law governing the magnetic properties of metamagnets - metal alloys that can undergo dramatic increases in magnetisation when a small external magnetic field is applied, such as from a permanent magnet or an electromagnet.
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This is significant because eventually scientists and engineers likely will harness this unique property for a variety of applications, including refrigeration.
"We found that this nonlinear property has the same quantitative behaviour in all different types of metamagnets, which is the universal law," said Bellave Shivaram, a University of Virginia professor of physics who led the research, which was conducted in his lab using materials synthesised at Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois.
According to Shivaram, the newly unveiled non-linear property can be exploited in many ways.
"A very useful property of this type of magnetism is in magnetic refrigeration," he said.
"Magnetic refrigerators are not commonplace; they still are in the experimental stage. But they could eventually become part of everyday home appliances, from heat pumps to the refrigerators we store food in," he added.
Currently, metamagnets produce efficient cooling only at very low temperatures, using superconducting magnets, making them impractical for general refrigeration.
"With the new discoveries of the properties of metamagnets, they could become part of everyday home appliances within a decade or so," Shivaram said.
Current refrigerators are among the biggest consumers of energy in the home. They include several moving parts, which make them costly to repair, and they can leak fluorocarbons into the atmosphere, which can deplete ozone.
Refrigerators of the future, using metamagnets, would have fewer moving parts, would not require refrigerants, and, likely would use less electricity, Shivaram said.
"In these new materials, the magnetism can be cycled on and off, enabling heat to be pumped away in a manner similar to what happens in a heat pump today," Shivaram said.
"In today's heat pump, we use pressure to cycle the cooling medium from liquid to vapor phase. In the new magnetic refrigerators we will use a magnetic material and cycle the magnetic field instead," he said.