Polyvinylidene fluoride-based polymers have emerged as promising materials for flexible and portable electronics, attracting significant attention as alternatives to electrocaloric ceramics for more energy-efficient cooling. Although many studies report record-high electrocaloric effect values and initial proof-of-concept devices, the lack of comparative temperature-dependent studies and unexplained large discrepancies among various direct electrocaloric characterization methods hinder their full commercial exploitation. In this work, a systematic study of trifluoroethylene-based copolymers and chloro(tri)fluoroethylene-based terpolymers using infrared imaging shows that commercially available polymers can compete with the best electrocaloric ceramics, exhibiting a large electrocaloric effect of ~4.5 K at 100 V µm−1 in several compositions. The proposed direct electrocaloric characterization method captures electrocaloric temperature changes near the adiabatic limit, resulting in lower measurement uncertainty and providing a valuable tool for better understanding discrepancies in reported electrocaloric effects and contributing to standardization. In addition, we show that a simplified Landau indirect approach can reasonably estimate the magnitude of the electrocaloric effect, offering an additional method for evaluating different compositions.
Prah et al. (Tue,) studied this question.