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1.
Materials (Basel) ; 14(24)2021 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34947355

ABSTRACT

Observations of the surface domain structure (Kerr-effect), optical metallography, scanning electron microscopy (SEM-SE), and electron microprobe analysis (EPMA-SEM), measurements of major and minor magnetic hysteretic loops were used to study pseudo-single-crystal samples of (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z alloys subjected to heat treatments to the high-coercivity state, which are used in fabricating sintered permanent magnets. Correlations between the chemical composition, hysteretic properties, structural components, domain structure, and phase state were determined for the concentration ranges that ensure wide variations of 4f-/4d-/3d-element ratio in the studied samples. The phase state formed by collinear and coherent phase components determines the high coercive force and ultimate magnetic hysteresis loops of the pseudo-single crystals. It was found that the 1:5 phase with the hexagonal structure (P6/mmm) is the matrix of the alloys for (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)z permanent magnets; the matrix undergoes phase transformations in the course of all heat treatments for the high-coercivity state. The heterogeneity observed with optical magnifications, namely, the observation of main structural components A and B, is due to the alternation, within the common matrix, of regions with modulated quasi-spherical precipitates and regions with hexagonal bipyramids (cellular phase) although, traditionally, many investigators consider the cellular phase as the matrix. It is shown that the relationship of volume fractions of structural components A and B that account for more than 0.9 volume fraction of the total, which is due to the integral chemical composition of the alloys, determines the main hysteretic performances of the samples. The Zr-rich phases, such as 5:19, 2:7, and 6:23, and a structural component with the variable stoichiometry (Sm(Co,Cu,Fe)3.5-5) that is almost free of Zr and contains up to 33 at% Cu, were found only within structural component A in quantities sufficient for EPMA analysis.

2.
Materials (Basel) ; 13(23)2020 Nov 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33260600

ABSTRACT

Experimental series of alloys for (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)Z permanent magnets are presented in the concentration ranges that provide wide variations of (4f)/(4d)/(3d) ratios of comprising elements. Optical metallographic analysis, observation of the surface domain structure upon magnetization reversal (Kerr effect), electron microprobe analysis, and measuring the major hysteresis loops of samples at different stages of heat treatment are used to study processes related to the development of the highly coercive state of these samples. It was found that the volume fractions of two main structural components A and B, which comprise 90% of the total sample volume, rigorously control the coercivity at all stages of thermal aging. At the same time, structural components A and B themselves in samples being in the high-coercivity state differ qualitatively and quantitatively in the chemical composition, domain structure and its development in external magnetic fields and, therefore, are characterized by different morphologies of the phases comprising the structural components. Two stages of phase transformations in the sample structure are observed. During isothermal annealing, the cellular structure develops within the B component, whereas, during stepwise (slow) cooling or quenching from the isothermal aging temperature to 400 °C, a phase structure evolves within both the cell boundaries in B and the structural component A. The degree of completion of the phase transformations within micro- and nano-volumes of the components determines the ultimate hysteretic characteristics of the material.

3.
Materials (Basel) ; 13(17)2020 Sep 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32899220

ABSTRACT

An original vision for the structural formation of (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)Z alloys, the compositions of which show promise for manufacturing high-coercivity permanent magnets, is reported. Foundations arising from the quantitative analysis of alloy microstructures as the first, coarse, level of heterogeneity are considered. The structure of the alloys, in optical resolutions, is shown to be characterized by three structural phase components, which are denoted as A, B, and C and based on the 1:5, 2:17, and 2:7 phases, respectively. As the chemical composition of alloys changes monotonically, the quantitative relationships of the components A, B, and C vary over wide ranges. In this case, the hysteretic properties of the (Sm,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)Z alloys in the high-coercivity state are strictly controlled by the volume fractions of the A and B structural components. Based on quantitative relationships of the A, B, and C structural components for the (R,Zr)(Co,Cu,Fe)Z alloys with R = Gd or Sm, sketches of quasi-ternary sections of the (Co,Cu,Fe)-R-Zr phase diagrams at temperatures of 1160-1190 °C and isopleths for the 2:17-2:7 phase composition range of the (Co,Cu,Fe)-Sm-Zr system were constructed.

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