Structure of Alloys for (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z Permanent Magnets: II. Composition, Magnetization Reversal, and Magnetic Hardening of Main Structural Components
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Samples prepared from single grain of alloy ingot are not single crystals because of their heterophase structure. However, taking into account the collinearity of all phases comprising the samples (with the common easy magnetization axis), we call them pseudo-single-crystal samples (from here in, samples).
- We call the hysteresis loops of samples comprising an individual experimental series ultimate hysteresis loops if, during magnetic measurements, at least some samples of this series exhibit the value of (BH)MAX equal to (4πJS)2/4.
- the magnetization reversal processes of two base structural components A and B;
- the chemical composition of components A and B in samples in the high-coercivity state, the composition ranges of which ensure changing the volume fractions of these components within wide ranges;
- the peculiarities of the magnetic hardening of samples at different stages of thermal aging in accordance with the relationship of volume fractions of structural components A and B.
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Peculiarities of Magnetization Reversal of Main Structural Components of (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z Alloys in the High-Coercivity State
3.2. Composition Peculiarities of Structural Components of (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z Alloy Samples in the High-Coercivity State
3.3. Effect of the Relationship of Main Structural Components A and B on the Magnetic Hardening of the (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z Alloys during Heat Treatment
3.4. Effect of Relationships of Volume Fractions of Main Structural Components A and B on the Temperature Dependences of the Coercive Force (HCJ) of (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z Alloy Samples in the High Coercivity State
4. Discussion
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- the same level of concentrations of main elements in the integral composition of the alloy after solid solution heat treatment;
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- directional diffusion of elements between structural components formed based on different phases;
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- wide ranges of variations of the volume fractions of components A and B in accordance with z of alloy.
5. Conclusions
- The heat treatment for the high-coercivity state leads to the substantial separation of two main structural components (A and B) in the chemical composition; the separation is caused by different temperature dependencies of the solubility of 3d elements in the phases being the basis for these structural components (1:5 and 2:17, respectively).
- The separation of the structural components in the chemical composition predetermines the formation of different domain-wall pinning centers (thin phase structure), which determines qualitative and quantitative differences in the development of surface domain structures in structural components A and B upon magnetization reversal.
- The surface domain structure of component B is the network of reverse zigzagging submicron-thick domains, which arise from numerous centers. As the magnetization reversing magnetic field increases, the magnetization reversal of B occurs at the expense of appearance of new domains that progressively fill the reverse-domain network rather than increasing the thickness of the domains.
- The surface domain structure of component A is analogous to that of Sm(Co,Cu,)x and Sm(Co,Cu,Fe)x alloy samples (x = 5–6). Its development upon magnetization reversal occurs from a limited number of centers at the expense of the formation of reverse labyrinth domains, which transfer into fern-like domains growing isotropically in all directions.
- The domain structure of component B in the pseudo-single-crystal samples indicates that the morphology of its fine phase structure is identical to the structure of sintered (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z magnets, which comprises cellular, boundary, and plate-like phases. In turn, the phase structure of component A is the model prototype of the boundary phase in sintered magnets.
- There is direct interrelation between the chemical composition of samples, relationship of volume fractions of main components (A and B) in the structure of samples, and development of the coercive force as a result of magnetic hardening upon isothermal aging followed by quenching or upon isothermal and stepped heat treatments.
- The cellular morphology in the alloy structure is formed in the course of isothermal aging, whereas the final phase compositions of component A and boundary phase B are formed in a temperature range from isothermal aging temperature to 400 °C upon stepped (slow) cooling or quenching.
- The propensity of chemical compositions of component A and component’s B boundary to phase transformations after the completion of isothermal aging (quenching or stepped aging) and degree of completion of these transformations directly depend on the relationship of volume fractions of component A and B and the (4f-,4d-)/(3d-) element ratio (i.e., z) in the (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z alloy. In turn, the degree of completion of phase transformations determines the final hysteretic properties of samples.
- The viewpoint that the formation of the final phase composition in the (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z alloy occurs only in the course of isothermal stage of heat treatment and that phase transformations are absent at the stage of stepped aging (or slow cooling) is inaccurate.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Series No. | x | a | b | z |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 0.13 | 0.088 | 0.210 | 6.0–6.8 |
2 | 0.15 | 0.088 | 0.210 | 6.0–6.8 |
3 | 0.17 | 0.088 | 0.210 | 6.0–6.8 |
4 | 0.19 | 0.088 | 0.210 | 6.0–6.8 |
5 | 0.15 | 0.075 | 0.260 | 6.0–6.8 |
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Dormidontov, A.G.; Kolchugina, N.B.; Dormidontov, N.A.; Milov, Y.V.; Andreenko, A.S. Structure of Alloys for (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z Permanent Magnets: II. Composition, Magnetization Reversal, and Magnetic Hardening of Main Structural Components. Materials 2020, 13, 5426. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13235426
Dormidontov AG, Kolchugina NB, Dormidontov NA, Milov YV, Andreenko AS. Structure of Alloys for (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z Permanent Magnets: II. Composition, Magnetization Reversal, and Magnetic Hardening of Main Structural Components. Materials. 2020; 13(23):5426. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13235426
Chicago/Turabian StyleDormidontov, Andrey G., Natalia B. Kolchugina, Nikolay A. Dormidontov, Yury V. Milov, and Alexander S. Andreenko. 2020. "Structure of Alloys for (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z Permanent Magnets: II. Composition, Magnetization Reversal, and Magnetic Hardening of Main Structural Components" Materials 13, no. 23: 5426. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13235426
APA StyleDormidontov, A. G., Kolchugina, N. B., Dormidontov, N. A., Milov, Y. V., & Andreenko, A. S. (2020). Structure of Alloys for (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z Permanent Magnets: II. Composition, Magnetization Reversal, and Magnetic Hardening of Main Structural Components. Materials, 13(23), 5426. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13235426