Mingpeng Kou , Thi Mai Nguyen , Qing Feng , Shiying Chen , Liuxin Yang , Hongya Yu , Jiaying Jin , Zhongwu Liu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The diffusion temperature has shown significant effects on the microstructure and magnetic properties of the grain boundary diffusion (GBD) treated Nd-Fe-B magnets, but the underlying mechanism is still not quite clear. Here, the sintered Nd-Fe-B magnets were processed by GBD with Nd20Dy60Al20 alloy as the diffusion source. After diffusion at 800 °C, 900 °C, and 950 °C, the magnets exhibit increased intrinsic coercivity from 924 kA/m to 1231 kA/m, 1346 kA/m, and 1163 kA/m, respectively. The microstructure analysis reveals two types of diffusion behavior for Dy element in the magnet during GBD, i.e. lattice diffusion and inter-grain diffusion. Lattice diffusion helps to form core-shell structured hard magnetic grains while inter-grain diffusion promotes the diffusion depth. These two types of diffusion can be modified by the diffusion temperature. At the diffusion temperature of 800 °C, Dy element tends to enter into the interior of the magnet along the grain boundary by inter-grain diffusion, but at 950 °C, it prefers to substitute Nd to enter into the grain by lattice diffusion. These two diffusion behaviors achieve a delicate balance at 900 °C, and both the effective diffusion depth and the desired thickness of the magnetically hardened shell can be realized, which results in the highest coercivity enhancement.
期刊介绍:
Materials Research Bulletin is an international journal reporting high-impact research on processing-structure-property relationships in functional materials and nanomaterials with interesting electronic, magnetic, optical, thermal, mechanical or catalytic properties. Papers purely on thermodynamics or theoretical calculations (e.g., density functional theory) do not fall within the scope of the journal unless they also demonstrate a clear link to physical properties. Topics covered include functional materials (e.g., dielectrics, pyroelectrics, piezoelectrics, ferroelectrics, relaxors, thermoelectrics, etc.); electrochemistry and solid-state ionics (e.g., photovoltaics, batteries, sensors, and fuel cells); nanomaterials, graphene, and nanocomposites; luminescence and photocatalysis; crystal-structure and defect-structure analysis; novel electronics; non-crystalline solids; flexible electronics; protein-material interactions; and polymeric ion-exchange membranes.