The present disclosure relates to the field of rare-earth permanent magnetic materials, and in particularly to a grain boundary diffusion method based on 1:2 phase for simultaneously improved corrosion resistance and coercivity of a mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material.
Cerium (Ce), a high-abundance rare earth element with cheap cost, easily form stable Ce2Fe14B tetragonal phase, which is prospective to replace those scarce rare earth elements such as neodymium (Nd), praseodymium (Pr), dysprosium (Dy), and terbium (Tb) and to produce low-cost Ce-rich permanent magnets. Based on the continual research progress on the Ce-rich permanent magnets in recent years, the development of mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic materials enriched with Ce, lanthanum (La), or yttrium (Y) can further lower the cost of raw materials, and realize balanced utilization of high-abundance mixed rare-earth resources, being one of the hotspots in current study.
However, intrinsic magnetism of (Ce/La/Y)2Fe14B are much lower than that of Nd2Fe14B, thereby decreasing magnetic properties the mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic materials. Particularly for the magnets with high Ce/La/Y substitution, the coercivity is decreased drastically that fails to meet the service requirements. In addition, complex chemical composition, structure and distribution of new grain boundary phase of the mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic materials may exert greater impact on the anti-corrosion properties. For conventional grain boundary reconstruction method or conventional grain boundary diffusion method, more rare-earth-rich grain boundary phases are introduced to isolate short-range exchange coupling between adjacent ferromagnetic main phase grains and to improve the coercivity. However, the introduced rare-earth-rich grain boundary phase acts as corrosion channels to aggravate electrochemical corrosion and deteriorate the corrosion resistance severely. Therefore, how to improve the corrosion resistance and the coercivity simultaneously is a key challenge for batch application of the mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic materials at present.
In view of this, in order to solve the problems of simultaneously improved corrosion resistance and coercivity of the mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material, the present disclosure provides a grain boundary diffusion method based on 1:2 phase, which makes full use of the synergistic effect and characteristic diffusion behavior of multiple rare earths in the grain boundary diffusion process to increase 1:2 phase fraction and regulate the composition and distribution of 1:2 phase.
In order to achieve the above objectives, the present disclosure provides the following technical solutions.
A grain boundary diffusion method based on 1:2 phase for simultaneously improved corrosion resistance and coercivity of a mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material is provided, which includes following step 1) to step 4):
The grain boundary diffusion method based on 1:2 phase for simultaneously improved corrosion resistance and coercivity of a mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material further includes: after performing the grain boundary diffusion heat treatment, performing a tempering process with a tempering temperature in a range from 400° C. to 680° C. and a tempering time in a range from 0 h to 10 h.
The present disclosure may have at least the following beneficial effects compared with related art.
1) The present disclosure applies to a Ce rich mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material, with Ce accounting for 30% to 90% of the total rare earth, which not only significantly reduces raw material cost of the magnet, but also makes full use of characteristic phase formation law and diffusion behavior of Ce—Fe—B system compared to conventional Nd—Fe—B system to prepare the sintered bulk magnets by a powder metallurgical process. A characteristic REFe2 phase (1:2 phase) forms in the sintered magnet of the Ce-rich mixed rare-earth in a composition range of the present disclosure, which is different from the conventional-Nd rich phase. The 1:2 phase will be inherited from cast strip into the sintered magnet and will be further evolved to distribute at intergranular regions during the high-temperature sintering and annealing process.
2) Furthermore, the pristine sintered magnet includes at least one of La, Y, Gd, Pr, etc, in addition to Ce and Nd, that is to say, multiple rare earth elements co-exist. The composition design of the mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic materials is concerned with preferential site occupation and phase formation discipline of different rare earth elements, which can fully utilize synergistic effects among multiple rare earth elements and alloying elements as well. As a result, during the grain boundary diffusion, high intrinsic magnetic properties of a main phase can be maintained, meanwhile formation of 1:2 grain boundary phase can be promoted.
3) The grain boundary diffusion source is infiltrated into the pristine sintered magnet, which further promotes precipitation and formation of the 1:2 grain boundary phase in the form of triple junctions and continuous grain boundaries through the elemental diffusion and phase transformation. The spontaneously formed 1:2 phase not only strengthens the chemical stability of the intergranular region, but also improves the wettability to decrease the density of defects at the main phase/grain boundary phase interface. Consequently, the corrosion resistance and coercivity of the mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material can be simultaneously improved. This is an important reason that the present disclosure can increase the proportion of Ce to the total rare earth up to 90%. The present disclosure not only provides a low-cost preparation method for mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material, but also solves the key problem of long-standing difficulties in simultaneously improving the corrosion resistance and coercivity of the rare-earth permanent magnetic material. This is of great significance for commercialization and application of high-abundance mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material, especially in corrosive environments such as marine vessels.
4) Higher fraction of 1:2 grain boundary phase during the grain boundary diffusion is accompanied with tailored composition among main phase grains, the regulated composition and distribution of the 1:2 phase, which is an important way to optimize microstructure of the pristine sintered magnet with different compositions. It also paves a novel way to enhance the coercivity of the mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material.
5) For the magnet containing high fraction of 1:2 phase after the grain boundary diffusion treatment, a tempering process can be omitted, thereby providing a short-processing method.
The present disclosure will be further described hereinafter in combination with concrete embodiments, but the present disclosure is not limited to the following embodiments.
1) A pristine sintered magnet is prepared using a powder metallurgy process, and a composition of the pristine sintered magnet is: (Ce0.4Nd0.38La0.1Pr0.05Ho0.07)30.8Febal(Al0.35Ga0.15Cu0.25Nb0.25)1.5B1.0 according to mass percentages.
2) A grain boundary diffusion source is loaded on a surface of the pristine sintered magnet through adhesive bonding to obtain a loaded magnet, and a composition of the grain boundary diffusion source is (Nd0.6Pr0.4)0.75Fe0.15Cu0.1 according to mass percentages.
3) Grain boundary diffusion heat treatment is performed on the loaded magnet, with a diffusion temperature of 900° C. and a diffusion time of 5 h, to obtain a treated magnet; and then a tempering process is performed on the treated magnet with a tempering temperature of 480° C. and a tempering time of 3 h.
4) A mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material rich in 1:2 phase is finally obtained with simultaneously improved corrosion resistance and coercivity. A step-scanned X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) refinement analysis shows that the magnet contains 4.5 wt. % 1:2 phase. A weight loss of the magnet is 2.5 mg/cm3 after exposure in a hot and humid environment (100% relative humidity, 2 bar, 120° C.) for 96 h. An AMT-4 magnetic analysis shows that the coercivity of the magnet is 13.1 kOe.
A difference between the first comparative example and the first embodiment is that the magnet in the first comparative example is not subjected to grain boundary diffusion heat treatment. A step-scanned XRD refinement analysis shows that the untreated magnet contains 2.9 wt. % 1:2 phase, which is smaller than that in the first embodiment. A weight loss of the untreated magnet is 9.4 mg/cm3 after exposure in a hot and humid environment (100% relative humidity for 96 h, 2 bar, 120° C.), which is much greater than that in the first embodiment. An AMT-4 magnetic analysis shows that the coercivity of the untreated magnet is 7.3 kOe, which is much smaller than that in the first embodiment.
1) A pristine sintered magnet is prepared using a powder metallurgy process, and a composition of the pristine sintered magnet is: (Ce0.3Nd0.54Y0.1Gd0.06)30.5Febal(Co0.35Al0.25Cu0.2Si0.05Zr0.15)1.3B1.05 according to mass percentages.
2) A grain boundary diffusion source is loaded on a surface of the pristine sintered magnet through direct physical contact to obtain a loaded magnet, and a composition of the grain boundary diffusion source is (Pr0.85La0.1Dy0.05)0.8Fe0.14Al0.05H0.01 according to mass percentages.
3) Grain boundary diffusion heat treatment is performed on the loaded magnet, with a diffusion temperature of 800° C. and a diffusion time of 6 h, to obtain a treated magnet; and then a tempering process is performed on the treated magnet, with a tempering temperature of 500° C. and a tempering time of 6 h.
4) A mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material which is rich in 1:2 phase is finally obtained with simultaneously improved corrosion resistance and coercivity. A step-scanned XRD refinement analysis shows that the magnet contains 3.5 wt. % 1:2 phase. A weight loss of the magnet is 2.5 mg/cm3 after exposure in a hot and humid environment (100% relative humidity, 2 bar, 120° C.) for 96 h. An AMT-4 magnetic analysis shows that the coercivity of the magnet is 15.2 kOe.
A difference between the second comparative example and the second embodiment is that the magnet in the second comparative example is not subjected to grain boundary diffusion heat treatment. A step-scanned XRD refinement analysis shows that the untreated magnet contains 1.8 wt. % 1:2 phase, which is smaller than that in the second embodiment. A weight loss of the untreated magnet is 10.7 mg/cm3 after exposure in a hot and humid environment (100% relative humidity, 2 bar, 120° C.) for 96 h, which is much greater than that in the second embodiment. An AMT-4 magnetic analysis shows that the coercivity of the untreated magnet is 9.8 kOe, which is much smaller than that in the second embodiment.
1) A pristine sintered magnet is prepared using a powder metallurgy process, and a composition of the pristine sintered magnet is: (Ce0.55Nd0.35La0.1)31.2Febal(Ga0.35Cu0.25Al0.2Zr0.15Nb0.05)2.0B0.95 according to mass percentages.
2) A grain boundary diffusion source is loaded on a surface of the pristine sintered magnet through magnetron sputtering physical vapor deposition, to obtain a loaded magnet, and a composition of the grain boundary diffusion source is Pr0.85Co0.15 according to mass percentages.
3) Grain boundary diffusion heat treatment is performed on the loaded magnet with a diffusion temperature of 850° C. and a diffusion time of 3 h, to obtain a treated magnet.
4) A mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material which is rich in 1:2 phase is finally obtained with simultaneously improved corrosion resistance and coercivity. A step-scanned XRD refinement analysis shows that the magnet contains 12.5 wt. % 1:2 phase. A weight loss of the magnet is 1.5 mg/cm3 after exposure in a hot and humid environment (100% relative humidity, 2 bar, 120° C.) for 96 h. An AMT-4 magnetic analysis shows that the coercivity of the magnet is 10.2 kOe.
A difference between the third comparative example and the third embodiment is that the magnet in the third comparative example is not subjected to grain boundary diffusion heat treatment. A step-scanned XRD refinement analysis shows that the untreated magnet contains 8.6 wt. % 1:2 phase, which is smaller than that in the third embodiment. A weight loss of the untreated magnet is 7.2 mg/cm3 after exposure in a hot and humid environment (100% relative humidity, 2 bar, 120° C.) for 96 h, which is much greater than that in the third embodiment. An AMT-4 magnetic analysis shows that the coercivity of the untreated magnet is 6.4 kOe, which is much smaller than that in the third embodiment.
1) A pristine sintered magnet is prepared using a powder metallurgy process, and a composition of the pristine sintered magnet is: (Ce0.75Nd0.05Y0.1Gd0.1)32Febal(Co0.5Si0.15Cu0.1Ga0.1Nb0.1Ta0.05)2.5B1.05 according to mass percentages.
2) A grain boundary diffusion source is loaded on a surface of the pristine sintered magnet through direct physical contact to obtain a loaded magnet, and a composition of the grain boundary diffusion source is (Pr0.8La0.1Ho0.1)0.8Ga0.185H0.015 according to mass percentages.
3) Grain boundary diffusion heat treatment is performed on the loaded magnet, with a diffusion temperature of 860° C. and a diffusion time of 5 h, to obtain a treated magnet; and then a tempering process is performed on the treated magnet, with a tempering temperature of 485° C. and a tempering time of 3 h.
4) A mixed rare-earth permanent magnetic material which is rich in 1:2 phase is finally obtained with simultaneously improved corrosion resistance and coercivity. A step-scanned XRD refinement analysis shows that the magnet contains 13.8 wt. % 1:2 phase. A weight loss of the magnet is 1.7 mg/cm3 after exposure in a hot and humid environment (100% relative humidity, 2 bar, 120° C.) for 96 h. An AMT-4 magnetic analysis shows that the coercivity of the magnet is 8.1 kOe.
A difference between the fourth comparative example and the fourth embodiment is that the magnet in the fourth comparative example is not subjected to grain boundary diffusion heat treatment. A step-scanned XRD refinement analysis shows that the untreated magnet contains 10.6 wt. % 1:2 phase, which is smaller than that in the fourth embodiment. A weight loss of the untreated magnet is 12.9 mg/cm3 after exposure in a hot and humid environment (100% relative humidity, 2 bar, 120° C.) for 96 h, which is much greater than that in the fourth embodiment. An AMT-4 magnetic analysis shows that the coercivity of the untreated magnet is 3.5 kOe, which is much smaller than that in the fourth embodiment.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2022103921135 | Apr 2022 | CN | national |