(Fe,Co)2(P,Si) rare-earth free permanent magnets

From macroscopic single crystals to submicron-sized particles

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

H. Yibole (Inner Mongolia Normal University China)

B. Bao (Inner Mongolia Normal University China)

J. Y. Xu (Inner Mongolia Normal University China)

H. Alata (Inner Mongolia Normal University China)

O. Tegus (Inner Mongolia Normal University China)

H. Gai (TU Delft - RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy)

N. H. Dijk (TU Delft - RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy)

EH Brück (TU Delft - RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy)

F. Guillou (Inner Mongolia Normal University China)

Research Group
RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy
Copyright
© 2021 H. Yibole, B. Lingling-Bao, J. Xu, H. Alata, O. Tegus, W. Hanggai, N.H. van Dijk, E.H. Brück, F. Guillou
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actamat.2021.117388
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 H. Yibole, B. Lingling-Bao, J. Xu, H. Alata, O. Tegus, W. Hanggai, N.H. van Dijk, E.H. Brück, F. Guillou
Research Group
RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy
Volume number
221
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Abstract

While rare-earth magnets exhibit unchallenged hard-magnetic properties, looking for alternatives based on inexpensive elements of non-critical supply remains of utmost interest. Here, we demonstrate that (Fe,Co)2(P,Si) single crystals combine a large magnetocrystalline anisotropy (K1 ≈ 0.9 MJ m−3 at 300 K), high Curie temperatures (TC up to 560 K) and an appreciable saturation specific magnetization (101 A m2 kg−1) leading to a theoretical |BH|max ≈ 165 kJ m-3, making them promising candidate materials as rare-earth-free permanent magnets. Our comparison between (Fe,Co)2P and (Fe,Co)2(P,Si) single crystals highlights that Si substitution reduces the low-temperature magnetocrystalline anisotropy, but strongly enhances TC, making the latter quaternary alloys most favorable for room temperature applications. Submicron-sized particles of Fe1.75Co0.20P0.75Si0.25 were prepared by a top-down ball-milling approach. While the energy products of bonded particles are to this point modest, they demonstrate that permanent magnetic properties can be achieved in (Fe,Co)2(P,Si) quaternary alloys. This work correlates the development of permanent magnetic properties to a control of the microstructure. It paves the way toward the realization of permanent magnetic properties in (Fe,Co)2(P,Si) alloys made of economically competitive Fe, P and Si elements, making these materials desirable for applications.

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