Abstract
ABSTRACTThis study relates the microstructure of equiatomic binary alloys of CoPt and FePt with their room-temperature hysteretic magnetic properties, particularly their high coercivity. A transformation from an atomically disordered, face-centered-cubic structure to the Li0ordered structure occurred during post-deposition annealing and was characterized using digital analysis of dark-field transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images. The transformation was observed to follow first-order nucleation and growth kinetics, and the ordered volume fraction transformed was quantified at numerous points during the transformation. The ordered volume fraction was then compared to the magnetic coercivity data obtained from a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometer. Although the relationship most commonly described in the literature is that the highest coercivity corresponds to a two phase ordered/disordered mixture, the maximum value for coercivity in this study was found to correspond to the fully ordered state. Furthermore, in samples that were less than fully ordered, a direct relationship between ordered volume fraction and coercivity was observed. The proposed mechanism for the high coercivity in these films is an increasing density of magnetic domain wall pinning sites concurrent with an increasing fraction of ordered phase.
Published Version
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