1. Field
The present application relates to a magnetic article, in particular an article with permanent magnetic properties, and to a method for producing a magnetic article.
2. Description of Related Art
Permanent magnets can be produced from alloys based on the Al—Ni—Co and Fe—Cr—Co systems for example. These magnets have so called half-hard magnetic properties and comprise a non-magnetic matrix with finely dispersed strongly ferromagnetic inclusions.
These alloys typically comprise at least 10% Co. In recent years, the cost of cobalt has risen significantly leading to an undesirable increase in the cost of magnets fabricated from these alloys.
It is, therefore, desirable to provide alternative magnetic materials which, preferably, have reduced raw materials costs and which can be reliably worked to provide permanent magnets having a variety of forms suitable for a wide variety of applications.
A magnetic material is provided comprising, in total, elements in amounts capable of providing at least one (La1-aMa)(Fe1-b-cTbYc)13-dXe phase and less than 5 Vol % impurities, wherein 0≦a≦0.9, 0≦b≦0.2, 0.05≦c≦0.2, −1≦d≦+1, 0≦e≦3, M is one or more of the elements Ce, Pr and Nd, T is one or more of the elements Co, Ni, Mn and Cr, Y is one or more of the elements Si, Al, As, Ga, Ge, Sn and Sb and X is one or more of the elements H, B, C, N, Li and Be. The magnetic article comprises a permanent magnet.
A soft magnetic material is defined as a magnetic material having a coercive field strength of less than 10 Oe. A permanent magnetic material is defined as a magnetic material which is not a soft magnetic material and has a coercive field strength of 10 Oe or greater.
However, permanent magnets can be further divided into two classes. A magnetic material having a coercive field strength of greater than 600 Oe may be defined as a hard magnetic material. Magnetic material having a coercive field strength in the range of 10 Oe to 600 Oe may be defined a half-hard magnetic material.
The composition disclosed herein includes the element lanthanum, which is associated with low raw material costs due to its natural abundance. Iron is also included, and is also inexpensive. Therefore, a permanent magnet is provided with low raw materials costs.
Furthermore, the composition, when heat treated to provide a magnetic article with permanent magnetic properties, can be easily worked by machining, for example, grinding and wire erosion cutting. Therefore, a large block may be produced by cost effective methods, such as powder metallurgical techniques, and then further worked to provide a number of smaller articles having the desired dimensions for a particular application. Magnetic articles can be cost-effectively produced for a wide variety of applications from this composition.
Alloys of the above composition are also capable of being heat treated to form a phase with a NaZn13-type crystal structure which can display a magnetocaloric effect. The composition can, however, also be heat treated to provide a magnetic article with permanent magnetic properties.
In an embodiment, a precursor article comprising at least one magnetocalorically active phase with a NaZn13-type crystal structure is heat treated so as to produce a permanent magnet. The present application therefore also relates to the use of a magnetocalorically active phase comprising a NaZn13-type crystal structure to produce a permanent magnet.
As used herein, magnetocalorically active is defined as a material which undergoes a change in entropy when it is subjected to a magnetic field. The entropy change may be the result of a change from ferromagnetic to paramagnetic behaviour, for example. The magnetocalorically active material may exhibit, in only a part of a temperature region, an inflection point at which the sign of the second derivative of magnetization with respect to an applied magnetic field changes from positive to negative.
In further embodiments, the magnetic article comprises the following magnetic properties: Br>0.35 T and HcJ>80 Oe and/or Bs>1.0 T.
In an embodiment, the magnetic article comprises a composition, in total, in which a=0, T is Co and Y is Si and e=0 and in a further embodiment 0<b≦0.075 and 0.05<c≦0.1 when a=0, T is Co and Y is Si and e=0.
The magnetic article may comprise at least one α-Fe-type phase. In a further embodiment, the magnetic article comprises greater than 60 vol % of one or more α-Fe-type phases. The α-Fe-type phase may further comprise Co and Si.
In an embodiment, the magnetic article further comprises La-rich and Si-rich phases.
The magnetic article may comprise a composite structure comprising a non-magnetic matrix and a plurality of permanently magnetic inclusions distributed in the non-magnetic matrix. As used herein, non-magnetic refers to the condition of the matrix at room temperature and includes paramagnetic and diamagnetic materials as well as ferromagnetic materials with a very small saturation polarization. The magnetic article may have half hard magnetic properties.
The permanent magnetic inclusions may be strongly ferromagnetic and may comprise an α-Fe-type phase or a plurality of α-Fe-type phases of differing composition.
In a further embodiment, the magnetic article comprises anisotropic magnetic properties.
Methods for producing a magnetic article are also provided. In an embodiment, a precursor article comprising, in total, elements in amounts capable of providing at least one (La1-aMa)(Fe1-b-cTbYc)13-dXe phase and less than 5 Vol % impurities is provided, wherein 0≦a≦0.9, 0≦b≦0.2, 0.05≦c≦0.2, −1≦d≦+1, 0≦e≦3, M is one or more of the elements Ce, Pr and Nd, T is one or more of the elements Co, Ni, Mn and Cr, Y is one or more of the elements Si, Al, As, Ga, Ge, Sn and Sb and X is one or more of the elements H, B, C, N, Li and Be. The precursor article is then heat treated to produce an article with permanent magnetic properties.
The precursor article may be self-supporting. For example, the precursor article may be provided in the form of a block, a plate, or tape. The precursor article may also be provided in the form of powder or flakes.
The heat treatment conditions are selected so as to produce a magnetic article with permanent magnetic properties or half-hard magnetic properties. Heat treatment conditions may include temperature, dwell time, ramp rate, cooling rate, the atmosphere under which the heat treatment takes place, for example under a vacuum or a gas such as argon. The heat treatment conditions required to produce a magnetic article with a permanent magnetic properties also depend on the composition of the precursor article and its density and may be adjusted to produce the desired magnetic properties.
In an embodiment, the precursor article is heat treated under conditions selected to produce at least one permanently magnetic α-Fe-type phase.
In a further embodiment, before the heat treating, the precursor article comprises at least one phase with a NaZn13-type crystal structure. This phase may also be magnetocalorically active.
If the precursor article comprises at least one phase with a NaZn13-type crystal structure, the precursor article may be heat treated under conditions selected so as to decompose the phase with the NaZn13-type crystal structure and form at least one permanent magnetic phase.
The heat treatment conditions may also be selected to produce permanent magnetic inclusions in a non-magnetic matrix and/or to produce an article that comprises a permanently magnetic portion of at least 60 vol %.
In further embodiments, the precursor article and/or the permanent magnet is heated treated whilst applying a magnetic field to produce an anisotropic permanent magnet. The magnetic field may be applied during the heat treatment to form the permanent magnet. Alternatively, or in addition, the permanent magnet may be subjected to a further heat treatment while applying the magnetic field.
In an embodiment, the precursor article is produced by mixing powders selected to provide, in total, elements in amounts capable of providing at least one (La1-aMa)(Fe1-b-cTbYc)13-dXe phase and sintering the powders at a temperature T1 to produce at least one phase with a NaZn13-type crystal structure. This phase may be magnetocalorically active.
After the heat treatment at temperature T1 to produce at least one phase with a NaZn13-type crystal structure, the article may be further heat treated at a temperature T2 to form at least one permanent magnetic phase, wherein T2<T1. The phase displaying permanent magnetic properties is formed at a lower temperature and the temperature required to form the phase or phases with the NaZn13-type crystal structure.
In an embodiment, the article is cooled from T1 to T2 at a rate of greater than 2 K/min or, preferably, greater than 10 K/min.
The temperature T2 may be selected so as to produce a decomposition of the phase with the NaZn13-type crystal structure at T2. The phase with permanent magnetic properties may form as a consequence of the decomposition of the phase with the NaZn13-type crystal structure.
In a further embodiment, the composition of the precursor article is selected so as to produce a reversible decomposition of the phase with the NaZn13-type crystal structure at the temperature T2. After decomposition of the phase with the NaZn13-crystal structure at T2, the phase with the NaZn13-type crystal structure may be reformable at a temperature T3, wherein T3 is greater than T2.
Embodiments will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which are not intended to be limiting, but to aid in understanding the embodiments disclosed herein.
a) is a SEM micrograph of an embodiment of a precursor article described herein,
b) is a SEM micrograph of the precursor article of
a) is a graph that illustrates a hysteresis loop measured for a permanent magnet comprising a composition in total of La(Fe, Si, Co)13 according to a further embodiment,
b) is a graph that illustrates an enlarged view of the hysteresis loop of
In a first set of experiments, three different compositions were investigated for the fabrication of magnetic articles having permanent magnetic or half hard magnetic properties. Compositions comprising, in total, elements in amounts capable of providing at least one La(Fe1-b-cCobSic)13-dXe phase were investigated.
The α-Fe content was measured using a thermomagnetic method in which the magnetic polarization of a sample heated above its Curie Temperature is measured as the function of temperature of the sample when it is placed in an external magnetic field. The Curie temperature of a mixture of several ferromagnetic phases can be determined and the proportion of α-Fe determined by use of the Curie-Weiss law.
In particular, thermally insulated samples of around 20 g are heated to a temperature of around 400° C. and placed in a Helmholz-coil which is situated in an external magnetic field of around 5.2 kOe produced by a permanent magnet. The induced magnetic flux is measured as a function of temperature as the sample cools.
A powder mixture comprising 18.55 wt % lanthanum, 3.6 wt % silicon, 4.62 wt % cobalt, balance iron was milled under protective gas to produce an average particle size of 3.5 μm (F. S. S. S.). The powder mixture was pressed under a pressure of 4 t/cm2 to form a block and sintered at 1080° C. for 8 hours. The sintered block had a density of 7.24 g/cm3. The block was then heated at 1100° C. for 4 hours and 1050° C. for 4 hours and rapidly cooled at 50 K/min to provide a precursor article. The precursor article comprised around 4.7% of α-Fe phases, see MPS 1037 in
The precursor article was then heated for a total of 32 hours at temperatures from 1000° C. to 650° C. in 50° C. steps to produce a magnetic article with permanent magnetic properties. The dwell time at each temperature was 4 hours. After this heat treatment, the block comprised 67.2 percent of α-Fe phases.
The magnetic properties of the block were measured. The coercive field strength HcJ of the block was 81 Oe, the remanence 0.39 T and the saturation magnetization was 1.2 T, see
A powder mixture comprising 18.39 wt % lanthanum, 3.42 wt % silicon, 7.65 wt % cobalt, balance iron was milled under protective gas, pressed to form a block and sintered at 1080° C. for 4 hours to produce a precursor article.
The precursor article was then heated at 750° C. for 16 hours to produce a permanent magnet. After this heat treatment was observed to have an α-Fe content of greater than 70%.
A second precursor article produced from this powder batch was heated at a temperature of 650° C. A dwell time of 80 hours at 650° C. produced an α-Fe content of greater than 70%.
A powder mixture comprising 18.29 wt % lanthanum, 3.29 wt % silicon, 9.68 wt % cobalt, balance iron was milled under protective gas, pressed to form a block and sintered at 1080° C. for 4 hours to produce a precursor article.
The precursor article was then heated at 750° C. A dwell time of 80 hours was required to produce an α-Fe content of greater than 70%.
From a comparison of Embodiments 2 and 3, the temperature and dwell time required to produce a magnetic article with an α-Fe content of greater than 70% may depend on the total composition of the precursor article.
A magnetic article may be expected to have increasingly better permanent magnetic properties for increasing α-Fe contents. The effect of the heat treatment conditions on the measured α-Fe content was investigated further in the following embodiments.
Effect of Heat Treatment Temperature on α-Fe Content
The effect of temperature on α-Fe content was investigated for precursor articles fabricated using the powder mixture of embodiments 2 and 3 above. The results are summarized in
Powder mixtures of embodiments 2 and 3 were pressed to form blocks and sintered at three different temperatures 1100° C., 1080° C. and 1060° for 4 hours, the first 3 hours in vacuum and the fourth hour in argon to produce precursor articles.
A precursor article of each composition sintered at each of the three temperatures was then heated for 6 hours in argon at 1000° C., 900° C. or 800° C. and the α-Fe content measured. The results are summarised in
The α-Fe content was measured to be much larger after a heat treatment at a temperature of 800° C. for both compositions for all of the samples than after a heat treatment at 900° C. or 1000° C.
The results of these experiments indicate that, for a particular dwell time, in this embodiment, 4 hours, there is an optimum temperature range for producing a high α-Fe content as the graph for each sample has a peak.
For a heat treatment time of four hours, the maximum α-Fe was observed at 750° C. for Embodiment 2 and the maximum α-Fe observed at 800° C. for Embodiment 3. These results also indicate that the optimum heat treatment conditions to produce the highest α-Fe content depends on the composition of the precursor article.
Effect of the Heat Treatment Time on α-Fe Content
In a further set of experiments, the effect of the heat treatment time on the α-Fe content was investigated.
Sintered precursor articles comprising the composition of Embodiments 2 and 3 were heat treated at 650° C., 700° C., 750° C. and 850° C. for different times and the α-Fe content measured. The results are summarised in Tables 1 and 2.
These results indicate that, in general, the α-Fe content increases for increased heat treatment times at these temperatures.
Effect of Cooling Rate on α-Fe Content
The effect of a slow cooling rate was simulated for a second set of precursor articles sintered to produce a magnetocalorically active phase having a Curie temperature and composition as listed in Table 3.
The compositions listed in Table 3 are the so called metallic contents of the precursor articles and are therefore denoted with the subscript m. The metallic content of an element differs from the overall content of the element in that the portion of the element which is present in the article in the form of an oxide or nitride, for example La2O3 and LaN, is subtracted from the overall content to give the metallic content.
A very slow cooling rate was simulated by heating the samples at 1100 for 4 hours followed by rapid cooling to determine a starting α-Fe content. Afterwards the temperature was reduced at 50° C. intervals and the sample heated for further 4 hours at each temperature before being rapidly cooled. The α-Fe content was measured after heat treatment at each temperature. The results are illustrated in
The α-Fe content was observed to increase for decreasing temperature for all of the samples. In contrast to the embodiment illustrated in
a illustrates an SEM micrograph for an embodiment of a precursor article having a composition of 3.5 wt % silicon and 8 wt % cobalt which was sintered at 1080° C. for 4 hours. This precursor article includes a La(Fe,Si,Co)13-based phase which is magnetocalorically active.
b illustrates an SEM micrograph of the block of
Permanent magnets having in total elements in amounts to produce a La(Si, Fe, Co)13-based phase having a Curie temperature can be produced with α-Fe contents of at least 60% by selecting the heat treatment conditions, such as the heat treatment temperature, dwell time and cooling rate.
The nomenclature La(Si, Fe, Co)13 is used to indicate that the sum of the elements Si, Fe and Co is 13 for 1 La. The Si, Fe and Co content may, however, vary although the total of the three elements remains the same.
Magnetic Properties
The magnetic properties of magnets having an overall composition of La(Fe, Si, Co)13 were investigated. In particular, three compositions with differing silicon contents were investigated. The compositions in weight percent are summarized in table 6.
Alloy 1 has a composition of 18.1 wt % La, 4.49 wt % Co, 3.54 wt % Si, 0.026 wt % C, 0.24 wt % 0, 0.025 wt % N, balance Fe. Alloy 2 has a composition of 18.1 wt % La, 4.48 wt % Co, 3.64 wt % Si, 0.025 wt % C, 0.23 wt % 0, 0.026 wt % N, balance Fe. Alloy 3 has a composition of 18.1 wt % La, 4.48 wt % Co, 3.74 wt % Si, 0.024 wt % C, 0.23 wt % 0, 0.025 wt % N, balance Fe.
Permanent magnets were fabricated by pressing milled powders having the overall composition of alloys 1, 2 and 3 to form a green body. The green body was heat treated at 1100° C. for 3 hours in vacuum and 1 hour in Argon, then at 1040° C. for 8 hours in Argon before being quenched at 50 K/min to room temperature.
A further annealing treatment at temperatures in the range from 650° C. to 850° C. for dwell times in the range 12 hours to 140 hours was carried out under an Argon atmosphere. The samples were quenched from the annealing temperature at 50 K/min to room temperature.
The coercivity of the samples was measured using a commercially available system known as a Koerzimat and the results are summarized in table 7.
For all of the compositions, the measured coercivity decreases with increasing annealing temperature. The highest coercivity values were measured for samples annealed at 650° C.
The results also indicate that the coercivity depends on the silicon content. For all of the annealing temperatures, the measured coercivity is larger for increasing silicon content. Alloy 3 with the highest silicon content showed the highest coercivity for all annealing temperatures investigated.
The magnetic properties of coercivity HcJ and remanence Br were measured for alloy 2 in a vibrating sample magnetometer and the results are summarized in table 8. These results also show that the coercivity decreases for increasing annealing temperature. However, the measured remanence is greater for annealing temperatures of 700° C., 750° C. and 800° C. than for annealing temperatures of 650° C. and 850° C.
The hysteresis loop of a sample of alloy 2 annealed at 700° C. for 72 hours under argon is illustrated in
The open remanence is dependent on the geometry of the sample tested. All of the samples have the same geometry so that the values of the open remanence summarized in
Four measurements are illustrated for each sample. For samples annealed at 650° C., the coercivity as well as the open remanence increases for increasing annealing time. For the other annealing temperatures, the maximum values of the open remanence and coercivity were reached after about 12 hours. Longer annealing times were observed to result in little further increase in the values of the open remanence and coercivity.
Mechanical Properties of the Permanent Magnets
The compression strength of the permanent magnets was also measured and a average compression strength of 1176.2 N/mm2 and 1123.9 N/mm2 measured. The elastic modulus was measured to be 168 kN/mm2 and 162 kN/mm2, respectively.
The permanent magnets could be worked by grinding and wire erosion cutting to produce two or more smaller permanent magnets from the as-produced larger permanent magnets. Therefore, the permanent magnets can be produced using cost-effective manufacturing techniques since large blocks can be produced and afterwards worked to produce a plurality of smaller magnets with the desired dimensions.
In an embodiment, a permanent magnet having a composition of 18.55 wt % La, 4.64 wt % Co, 3.60 wt % Si, balance iron and dimensions of 23 mm×19 mm×6.5 mm was singulated by wire erosion cutting into a plurality of pieces having dimensions of 11.5 mm×5.8 mm×0.6 mm.
In a further embodiment, a permanent magnet having a composition of 18.72 wt % La, 9.62 wt % Co, 3.27 wt % Si, balance iron and dimensions of 23 mm×19 mm×6.5 mm was singulated by wire erosion cutting into a plurality of pieces having dimensions of 11.5 mm×5.8 mm×0.6 mm.
The invention having been thus described with reference to certain specific embodiments and examples thereof, it will be understood that this is illustrative, and not limiting, of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110001594 A1 | Jan 2011 | US |