Elastocaloric cooling: Refrigerator cools by flexing artificial muscles

There is room for just one small bottle in the world’s first refrigerator that is cooled with artificial muscles made of nitinol, a nickel-titanium alloy. But the mini-prototype is groundbreaking: it shows that elastocalorics is becoming a viable solution for practical applications. This climate-friendly cooling and heating technology is far more energy-efficient and sustainable than current methods.

Source: sciencedaily.com

Related posts

Modular, scalable hardware architecture for a quantum computer

Chicken feathers to deliver chemotherapy drugs and repair enzymes

Grow the skin you’re in: In vivo generation of chimeric skin grafts