The present invention relates generally to magnetic materials and more particularly to composite materials with a high remanence and high coercivity.
Magnetic materials are known and used in a variety of end applications. Example magnetic materials can include a monolithic structure formed of a magnetic material or a composite of magnetic material particles mixed with an organic binder. However, such magnetic materials are limited by the amount of magnetic material that can be incorporated in the composite structure.
According to one embodiment, a composite magnetic material includes magnetic particles with a shape and a volume fraction. The composite material also includes a polymeric matrix surrounding the particles and has a fractional remanence greater than 0.5.
In another embodiment, a dispersion of magnetic particles in a continuous curable polymer matrix includes a particle volume fraction of greater than 60% and a fractional remanence of 0.5 or higher.
The utility and effectiveness of contemporary composite magnetic structures comprising magnetic particles in a polymer matrix is a function of a number of features. Two of the most important are the magnetic loading properties of the component and the shape of the component.
The magnetic loading properties of a composite magnetic structure are determined by the volume fraction of the magnetic material in the structure typically in the form of dispersed magnetic particles. For spherical magnetic particles with a unimodal size distribution, the maximum volume fraction that can be achieved by a random packing of spheres of a similar radius is approximately 64% by volume. For a given material, this limits the magnetic properties to 64% of their 100% dense sintered counterparts.
A method of increasing the magnetic loading of composite material is to increase the volume fraction of the magnetic component of the composite. In the case of spherical particles, random sphere packing volume fraction increases by using particle size distributions that are bimodal, trimodal, or greater multimodal. A bimodal particle size distribution can achieve random volume packing densities as high as 85%, which represents a 33% packing increase in density and magnetization over a unimodal size distribution. The magnetic properties of the composite are further improved by minimizing the volume fraction of binder in the composite structure. This is achieved, as discussed later, by using less binder and strengthening the binder with an additional treatment during fabrication of the composite.
The second feature important for optimizing the utility of magnetic composite materials of the present disclosure is component shape. Additive manufacturing has allowed intricate shapes to be produced that can be designed to optimize the functionality of each component according to the performance expected from each application.
The composite magnetic materials of the present disclosure include hard or permanent magnetic materials. The properties of hard or permanent magnetic materials are summarized in
The shapes of the dispersed magnetic particles in the composite magnetic materials of the present disclosure may vary. For example, spheres, spheroids, disks, rods, fibers, prisms, and other shapes may be used which may have isotropic or anisotropic shape morphology. These particles are bound together using thermally-curable thermoset resin binders such as, for example, methacrylate, silicone and epoxy resins.
A method of forming a printed composite magnetic structure is shown in
In the next step, the powder may be blended with a binder preferably a polymer precursor binder to form a dispersion, such as a slurry or an ink, that may be used to form 3D shapes by additive manufacturing (step 14). When formulating inks or slurries for DW printing, the viscosity and otherwise printability of the ink is a function of the shape and loading of the solid magnetic particles.
The viscosity as a function of shear rate for inks containing different particle loading of unimodally distributed 25 micron spherical magnetic particles is shown in
In the next step, the ink may be added to a 3D printer in preparation for forming a composite magnetic part (step 16). A number of 3D forming processes may be employed, for example, fused deposition modeling (FDM), selective laser sintering (SLS), binder jetting, and direct write (DW) printing. FDM incorporates filaments which are unwound from a coil and fed through an extrusion nozzle which melts the filaments and extrudes the material onto a base in a layer-by-layer build. Both nozzle and base are controlled by a computer that creates a 3D object according to a file stored in a computer. SLS is a layer-by-layer process that spreads powder on a base and sinters portions of the powder into a solid mass. The base indexes down one layer thickness and the process is repeated until an object is formed. The solid part that forms is a replica of a 3D model stored in memory in a computer. Binder jetting is a powder process that builds, in a layer-by-layer fashion on a base, cross sectional layers of a part according to a solid 3D model wherein portions of each layer are secured by a binder printed on the layer. As in other methods, the base indexes down one layer thickness and the process is repeated until an object is formed.
In the illustrated embodiment, DW printing is used (step 18). A schematic diagram illustrating four major steps in a DW printing process 30 is shown in
As noted earlier, the present disclosure describes forming a composite polymer/permanent magnetic material with optimum remanence and coercivity. This can be accomplished by using magnetic particles with high random packing density and a polymeric matrix with minimum volume fraction. In an example, a number of sample composite magnetic material structures were formed by a number of different methods and their magnetic properties measured. These samples were loaded with 60% volume fraction unimodally distributed 25-μm NdFeB spherical particles bonded in a methacrylate polymer matrix. A scanning electron micrograph of the printed composite magnetic material is shown in
A number of different samples of composite structures were obtained using the material shown in
In
It was mentioned previously that bimodal or higher particle size distribution packing can lead to improved magnetic properties of a composite material. As noted earlier, the packing density of a bimodal spherical magnetic particle distribution will result in a 33% increase in fractional remanence. This is illustrated by the predicted diamond data point 72 on the figure, which represents an even further improved material over direct write plus near UV cure sample 70 of the present disclosure. In summary, the composite magnetic material of the present disclosure (samples 60-70) exhibits properties superior to those in the prior art.
Small DW printed composite magnetic structures of 60% volume fraction unimodally distributed 25-μm NdFeB particles in a methacrylate polymer matrix formed by direct write plus UV cure are shown in
With the exception of direct write sample 68, the examples discussed here were composite materials comprising spherical magnetic particles in a polymer matrix. The invention is not limited to these examples. In addition to a spherical shape, the particles may be spheroids, rods, fibers, plates, disks, prismatic, or random. In addition, the particles in a magnetic composite material may be mixtures of the above.
The key benefits of the near UV assisted DW fabrication method of the present disclosure are that the method is a low temperature process with a potential for high resolution using 200 micron line width printing. Low temperature benefits include no loss of coercivity through oxidation which starts at temperatures of about 80° C. and the ability to be integrated into low temperature integrated electronic package manufacturing processes. High resolution processing of magnetoelectronic devices eliminates the need for post-processing manufacturing procedures.
The following are non-exclusive descriptions of possible embodiments of the present invention.
The composite magnetic material formed by additive manufacturing may include magnetic particles with a shape, volume fraction, particle size, and particle size distribution in a polymeric matrix surrounding the magnetic particles. The magnetic material may also exhibit a fractional remanence greater than 0.5.
The material of the preceding paragraph can optionally include, additionally and/or alternatively, any one or more of the following features, configurations and/or additional components:
The first volume fraction may be greater than 60%.
The fractional coercivity may be greater than 0.95.
The magnetic particles may be NdFeB, rare earth cobalt, strontium ferrite, Alnico (Fe—Al—Ni—Co—Cu—Ti) alloys and mixtures thereof.
The polymeric matrix may be a material selected from the group consisting of silicone, epoxy resins, and mixtures thereof.
The shape may be a sphere, spheroid, rod, fiber, plate, disc, prismatic, or mixtures thereof.
The shape may be a sphere.
The additive manufacturing may include injection molding, fused deposition modelling, selective laser sintering, binderjet, direct write, direct write with near UV cure or mixtures thereof.
The additive manufacturing may be direct write with near UV cure.
The particle size distribution may be multimodal.
The particle size may be from about 0.01 micron to about 500 microns.
A dispersion of magnetic particles in a continuous curable polymer matrix may include a particle volume fraction greater than 60% and a fractional remanence of 0.5 or higher.
The dispersion of the preceding paragraph can optionally include, additionally and/or alternatively, any one or more of the following features, configurations and/or additional components:
The fractional coercivity may be greater than 0.95.
The magnetic material may include NdFeB, rare earth cobalt, strontium ferrite, Alnico (Fe—Al—Ni—Co—Cu—Ti) alloys and mixtures thereof.
The shape of the magnetic particles may be a sphere, spheroid, rod, fiber, plate, disc, prismatic, or mixtures thereof.
The shape of the magnetic particles may be spherical.
The polymer matrix may be selected from the group consisting of silicone, epoxy resins, and mixtures thereof.
The magnetic particle size distribution may be multimodal.
The magnetic particle size distribution may be bimodal.
The magnetic particle size may be from about 0.01 micron to about 500 micron.