The present invention relates to a method for manufacturing soft magnetic iron powder by using a water atomization method (hereinafter, also referred to as “water-atomized metal powder”), and in particular, relates to improving the amorphous material fraction of soft magnetic iron powder.
In a water atomization method, atomized metal powder is obtained by breaking up a molten metal stream into powdery metal (metal powder) with water jets ejected from, for example, nozzles and cooling the powdery metal (metal powder) with the water jets. On the other hand, in a gas atomization method, atomized metal powder is usually obtained by breaking up a molten metal stream into powdery metal with an inert gas ejected from nozzles and then causing the powdery metal (metal powder) to drop into a water tank or a flowing-water drum located under an atomizing apparatus to cool the powdery metal.
As a method for manufacturing metal powder, water atomization has high production capability with low cost as compared to gas atomization. In the case of gas atomization, it is necessary to use an inert gas for atomization, and gas atomization is inferior to water atomization from the viewpoint of atomizing energy. In addition, while metal powder particles manufactured by gas atomization have an almost spherical shape, metal powder particles manufactured by water atomization have irregular shapes. Therefore, when metal powder is formed into, for example, a motor core by performing compaction forming, irregularly shaped metal powder particles manufactured by water atomization have an advantage over spherically shaped metal powder particles manufactured by gas atomization in that metal powder particles are likely to entangle with each other to increase strength after compaction has been performed.
Nowadays, from the viewpoint of energy saving, there is a demand for reducing the iron loss and size of a motor core which is used for, for example, an electric automobile or a hybrid automobile. To date, such a motor core has been manufactured by placing thin electrical steel sheets on top of one another. However, nowadays, a motor core manufactured by using metal powder, which has a high design freedom in shape, is receiving much attention. To reduce iron loss of such a motor core, using non-crystalline (amorphous) metal powder is considered effective. To manufacture amorphous metal powder, it is necessary that, while atomizing high-temperature molten metal, atomized metal powder be rapidly cooled by using a coolant to prevent crystallization. In addition to reducing iron loss, it is necessary to increase magnetic flux density for reducing motor size and increasing motor power. To increase magnetic flux density, ferrous material concentration (including Ni and Co) is important, and there is a demand for soft magnetic iron powder, which is an amorphous soft magnetic metal powder for a motor core having a ferrous material concentration of about 76 at % to 90 at %.
When high-temperature molten metal (above-described broken-up metal powder) is cooled with water, water is instantly vaporized at the time of contact between the water and the molten metal to form a vapor film around the molten metal, and direct contact between a surface to be cooled and water is suppressed (film boiling occurs), which results in a stagnation in cooling rate.
To solve the problem of stagnation in cooling rate due to a vapor film or film boiling when manufacturing amorphous iron powder, investigations have been conducted to date. For example, Patent Literature 1 describes a technique of removing a surrounding vapor film by placing a device, through which a second liquid is ejected, under an atomizing apparatus and by controlling the ejection pressure of the liquid to be 5 MPa to 20 MPa to forcibly change the moving direction of a fluid dispersion containing molten metal.
PTL 1: Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2007-291454
The technique described in Patent Literature 1 states that it is possible to remove a vapor film by changing the moving direction of a fluid dispersion containing molten metal droplets after atomization with a liquid jet spray. However, in the case where the temperature of the molten metal surrounded by a vapor film is excessively high when the moving direction is changed, the molten metal may be covered with a vapor film again due to surrounding cooling water. On the contrary, in the case where the temperature of the molten metal is excessively low when the molten metal collides with a cooling block, the molten metal may solidify and the crystallization may progress. In particular, in the case where the amounts of ferrous elements (Fe, Co, and Ni) are large, cooling start temperature is high due to high melting point, and there is a tendency for film boiling to occur at the beginning of cooling. Therefore, it may be said that this technique is not sufficient to solve the problem.
Aspects of the present invention have been completed to solve the problem described above, and an object according to aspects of the present invention is to provide a method for manufacturing soft magnetic iron powder with which it is possible to effectively increase an amorphous material fraction of the soft magnetic iron powder, even in the case where the amounts of ferrous elements (Fe, Co, and Ni) are large.
The present inventors diligently conducted investigations to solve the problem described above and, as a result, found that, when the falling rate of a molten metal stream per unit time is defined as Qm (kg/min) and the ejection rate of high-pressure water per unit time is defined as Qaq (kg/min), there is a correlation between a mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) and the amorphous material fraction of soft magnetic iron powder, resulting in the completion of the present invention. The subject matter according to aspects of the present invention is as follows.
[1] A method for manufacturing soft magnetic iron powder, the method including ejecting high-pressure water to collide with a molten metal stream falling vertically downward, breaking up the molten metal stream into metal powder, and cooling the metal powder, in which, when a falling rate of the molten metal stream per unit time is defined as Qm (kg/min) and an ejection rate of the high-pressure water per unit time is defined as Qaq (kg/min), a mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) is 50 or more, and a total content of ferrous constituents (Fe, Ni, and Co) is 76 at % or more.
[2] The method for manufacturing soft magnetic iron powder according to item [1], in which an ejection pressure of the high-pressure water is 25 MPa to 60 MPa, and the total content of the ferrous constituents is 78 at % or more.
[3] The method for manufacturing soft magnetic iron powder according to item [1] or [2], in which a temperature of the high-pressure water is 20° C. or lower, and the total content of the ferrous constituents is 80 at % or more.
[4] A method for manufacturing soft magnetic iron powder, the method including ejecting high-pressure water to collide with a molten metal stream falling vertically downward, breaking up the molten metal stream into metal powder, and cooling the metal powder, in which when a falling rate of the molten metal stream per unit time is defined as Qm (kg/min) and an ejection rate of the high-pressure water per unit time is defined as Qaq (kg/min), a mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) is controlled on the basis of a correlation between the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) and an amorphous material fraction of soft magnetic iron powder to achieve a desired amorphous material fraction, and a total content of ferrous constituents (Fe, Ni, and Co) is 76 at % or more.
[5] The method for manufacturing soft magnetic iron powder according to item [4], in which the mass ratio is controlled by controlling a diameter of a teeming nozzle bore, through which the molten metal stream falls downward, and/or by controlling an ejection pressure of the high-pressure water.
According to aspects of the present invention, soft magnetic iron powder, which is amorphous powder containing mainly ferrous elements (including Ni and Co by which part of Fe is replaced), is able to be manufactured by using a water atomization method, and metal powder having a chemical composition with which it is possible to show excellent performance as a soft magnetic material can be produced in large quantity at low cost, which significantly contributes to the current trend toward resource saving and energy saving including, for example, the size reduction of a transformer and the reduction of the iron loss of a motor. By performing an appropriate heat treatment on this powder after forming, since crystals of a nanometer-order size are precipitated, it is possible to achieve both low iron loss and a high magnetic flux density.
In addition, it is possible to use aspects of the present invention for manufacturing, for example, any conventionally known amorphous soft magnetic material by water atomization. Nowadays, in addition, as described in, for example, Materia Japan, Vol. 41, No. 6, p. 392, the Journal of Applied Physics 105, 013922 (2009), Japanese Patent No. 4288687, Japanese Patent No. 4310480, Japanese Patent No. 4815014, International Publication No. WO2010/084900, Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2008-231534, Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2008-231533, and Japanese Patent No. 2710938, hetero-amorphous materials and nanocrystalline materials which have a high magnetic flux density are being developed. Aspects of the present invention is very advantageously suitable when used to manufacture such soft magnetic materials containing mainly Fe, Co, and Ni by water atomization. In particular, in the case where the total concentration (the total content of ferrous constituents) is more than 82.5 at %, since there is a significant increase in saturated magnetic flux density (Bs) when an amorphous material fraction after atomization is more than 90% and a particle diameter (average particle diameter) is 5 μm or more, the effects according to aspects of the present invention are markedly exerted. In addition, by applying aspects of the present invention to materials having chemical compositions out of the range described above, aspects of the present invention have an advantageous effect in that it is possible to stably obtain amorphous powder having a large particle diameter more easily than by using conventional methods.
Hereafter, embodiments of the present invention will be described. Here, the present invention is not limited to the embodiments below.
In
As described in detail below with reference to
In addition, as indicated in
As indicated in
Here, in contrast, it is clarified that, in the case where the ejection pressure is 25 MPa, it is possible to achieve a very high amorphous material fraction by controlling the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) to be 50 or more, even when the total content of ferrous constituents is 78 at %. From these results, it is clarified that it is possible to markedly increase the amorphous material fraction of soft magnetic iron powder by increasing ejection pressure, even in the case where the total content of ferrous constituents is 78 at % or more.
The reason why it is possible to achieve, even in the case where the total content of ferrous constituents is high, a markedly high amorphous material fraction by increasing ejection pressure is considered to be because it is possible to manufacture soft magnetic iron powder by cooling metal powder while destroying a vapor film.
Here, it is preferable that the upper limit of the ejection pressure be 60 MPa or less, because the upper limit of industrial pipework is generally 60 MPa, and because it is difficult to manufacture a valve through which a large amount of water is caused to flow in the case where the ejection pressure is more than 60 MPa. In addition, it is preferable that the total content of ferrous constituents be 82.5 at % or less in the case of the method utilizing ejection pressure, because it is possible to markedly increase the amorphous material fraction by controlling the ejection pressure to be 25 MPa to 60 MPa only in the case where the total content of ferrous constituents is 82.5 at % or less.
In the case of
As indicated in
In addition, it is preferable that the total content of ferrous constituents be 82.5 at % or less in the case of the method utilizing water temperature control, because it is possible to markedly increase the amorphous material fraction by controlling the water temperature to be 20° C. or lower only in the case where the total content of ferrous constituents is 82.5 at % or less.
In addition, also in the case of
As described above, either by decreasing the temperature of the high-pressure water, or by increasing the ejection pressure of the high-pressure water, it is possible to markedly increase the amorphous material fraction of soft magnetic iron powder in the case where the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) is 50 or more. As described above, although difficulty in markedly increasing the amorphous material fraction of soft magnetic iron powder increases with an increase in the total content of ferrous constituents, it is possible to markedly increase the amorphous material fraction of soft magnetic iron powder by a combination of a method in which the temperature of the high-pressure water is decreased and a method in which the ejection pressure of the high-pressure water is increased, even in the case where the total content of ferrous constituents is very high. Here, the expression “the total content of ferrous constituents is very high” refers to a case where the total content of ferrous constituents is 80 at % or more. In addition, it is preferable that the total content of ferrous constituents be 85.0 at % or less in the case of the method utilizing both water temperature control and ejection pressure control, because it is possible to markedly increase the amorphous material fraction by controlling water temperature to be 20° C. or lower and by controlling ejection pressure to be 25 MPa to 60 MPa only in the case where the total content of ferrous constituents is 85.0 at % or less.
Hereafter, a method for controlling the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) will be described. To control the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm), it is necessary to control the flow rate of a high-pressure water pump or the flow rate of the molten metal stream. In the case where the ejection pressure of the high-pressure water is fixed, since it is difficult to change the flow rate of the high-pressure water without changing cooling water-ejecting nozzle bodies, it is cumbersome to change the flow rate of the high-pressure water pump. Therefore, it is preferable that the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) be controlled by controlling the flow rate of the molten metal stream. Specifically, the controlling method is as follows.
First, there is a method in which, as illustrated in
Specific means for controlling the teeming nozzle bore diameter will be described with reference to
Hereafter, control of the temperature of the high-pressure water will be described with reference to
It is possible to control the temperature of the cooling water to be a desired temperature by checking the temperature of the water in the cooling-water tank with a thermometer (unillustrated) and by using the cooling water-temperature controller 16.
Hereafter, a method for controlling the ejection pressure of the high-pressure water will be described. It is possible to control the ejection pressure by controlling the rotation speed of the high-pressure pump through inverter control. In addition, in the case where the flow rate of the water is controlled with a constant ejection pressure, it is possible to perform the control by changing the nozzle tips fixed to the cooling nozzle header.
Hereafter, the material for which aspects of the present invention are applied will be described. There is no particular limitation on the material for which the manufacturing method according to aspects of the present invention is applied, and aspects of the present invention may be used for manufacturing any conventionally known water-atomized amorphous soft magnetic material.
Aspects of the present invention are very advantageously suitable when used to manufacture soft magnetic materials containing mainly Fe, Co, and Ni by water atomization. In particular, in the case where the total concentration (the total content of ferrous constituents) is more than 82.5 at %, the effects according to aspects of the present invention is markedly exerted, since there is a significant increase in saturated magnetic flux density (Bs) when an amorphous material fraction after atomization is more than 90% and a particle diameter (average particle diameter) is 5 μm or more. In addition, aspects of the present invention have an advantageous effect that it is possible to stably obtain amorphous powder having a large particle diameter by applying aspects of the present invention to materials having chemical compositions out of the range described above more easily than by using conventional methods. Here, it is preferable that the particle diameter of the above-described powder having a large particle diameter be 100 μm or less, because the upper limit of the particle diameter with which it is possible to sufficiently exert the effect described above is 100 μm. In addition, the particle diameter is determined by using the method described in EXAMPLES.
The experiments described below were conducted by using the apparatuses illustrated in
After soft magnetic iron powder was collected by a hopper, dried, and classified, the iron powder was subjected to X-ray diffractometry to determine halo peaks from amorphous materials (non-crystalline materials) and diffraction peaks from crystals. Then, amorphous material fraction was calculated by using a WPPD method. Here, in the examples of the present invention and the comparative examples, the particle diameter of the soft magnetic iron powder, whose amorphous material fraction was calculated, was +63 μm/−75 μm, and the particle diameter was classified and determined by using a sieve method. The average particle diameter of the obtained Fe-based powder (soft magnetic iron powder) was determined by, after removing contaminants which were different from the soft magnetic iron powder, using a laser diffraction/scattering-type particle size analyzer, and amorphous material fraction was calculated by performing X-ray diffractometry (by using a WPPD method).
In the examples of the present invention, soft magnetic materials having the following chemical compositions were prepared. Seven Fe-based soft magnetic materials having chemical compositions represented by, in terms of atomic percent (at %), Fe76Si9B10P5, Fe78Si9B9P4, Fe80Si8B8P4, Fe82.8B11P5Cu1.2, and Fe84.8Si4B10Cu1.2 for Fe-based soft magnetic materials, Fe69.8Co15B10P4Cu1.2 for an Fe—Co-based soft magnetic material containing Fe and Co in a total amount of 84.8%, and Fe69.8Ni1.2Co15B9.4P3.4Cu1.2 for an Fe-based soft magnetic material containing Fe, Co, and Ni in a total amount of 86.0%, were used. Regarding the contents, there may have been an error of about ±0.3 at % or some impurities may have been contained when the raw materials were prepared, and there may have been a slight change in chemical composition due to, for example, oxidation during melting or atomization.
In example 1 of the present invention, chemical composition represented by Fe76Si9B10P5 was used, and a diameter of the molten metal-injecting nozzle of 1.9 mm was selected, which resulted in a mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) of 51.
In examples 2 and 3 of the present invention, chemical compositions represented by Fe76Si9B10P5, Fe78Si9B9P4, and Fe80Si8B8P4 were used, and the diameter of the molten metal-injecting nozzle was selected so that the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) was 50 or more (51 to 55) in both the examples 2 and 3. In example 2, the ejection pressure of the cooling water was 25 MPa. In example 3, the temperature of the cooling water was 19° C. (±1° C.)
In example 4 of the present invention, chemical compositions represented by Fe78Si9B10P5, Fe78Si9B9P4, Fe80Si8B8P4, Fe82.8B11P5Cu1.2, Fe84.8Si4B10Cu1.2, Fe69.8Co15B10P4Cu1, and Fe69.8Ni1.2Co15B9.4P3.4Cu1.2 were used, the diameter of molten metal-injecting nozzle was selected so that the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) was 50 or more (50 to 57), the ejection pressure of the cooling water was 25 MPa or more, and the water temperature was 19° C. (±1° C.)
In example 5 of the present invention, chemical compositions represented by Fe76Si9B10P5, Fe78Si9B9P4, Fe80Si8B8P4, Fe82.8B11P5Cu1.2, Fe84.8Si4B10Cu1.2 Fe69.8Co15B10P4Cu1, and Fe69.8Ni1.2Co15B9.4P3.4Cu1.2 were used, a diameter of the molten metal-injecting nozzle of 0.5 mm to 0.3 mm was selected, nitrogen gas was injected into the tundish to apply pressure to the molten metal so that the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) was 50 or more (53 to 57), the ejection pressure of the cooling water was 25 MPa or more, and the water temperature was 19° C. (±1° C.)
In the comparative example, chemical compositions represented by Fe76Si9B10P5, Fe78Si9B9P4, Fe80Si8B8P4, Fe82.8B11P5Cu1.2, Fe84.8Si4B10Cu1.2, Fe69.8Co15B10P4Cu1, and Fe69.8Ni1.2Co15B9.4P3.4Cu1.2 were used, the diameter of the molten metal-injecting nozzle was selected so that the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) was 30 to 35, the ejection pressure was 10 MPa, and the water temperature was 32° C.
Among the results of the examples and the comparative examples, it was possible to achieve an amorphous material fraction of 98% or more, which was much larger than 90%, in the case of the examples which were within the range of the present invention. In the case of the comparative example, the amorphous material fraction was less than 90% due to an insufficient mass ratio (Qaq/Qm). From these results, it is clarified that it is possible to increase amorphous material fraction by, for example, controlling the mass ratio (Qaq/Qm) according to aspects of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2017-013604 | Jan 2017 | JP | national |
This is the U.S. National Phase application of PCT/JP2018/002228, filed Jan. 25, 2018, which claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2017-013604, filed Jan. 27, 2017, the disclosures of these applications being incorporated herein by reference in their entireties for all purposes.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2018/002228 | 1/25/2018 | WO | 00 |