Abstract

Traditional powder processing methods for Mn–Zn ferrites limits design freedom and scalability of producing customized soft magnetic cores. In this work, binder jet 3D printing techniques were applied to commercially available Mn–Zn ferrite powders and toroidal cores were successfully fabricated. As-printed Mn–Zn ferrite powders were sintered at different temperatures between 1300 and 1400 °C, resulted in an optimized single-phase spinel at 1350 °C. Microstructural characterization revealed high porosity remained for binder jetted materials and various magnetic property measurements were performed on sintered cores. Despite high porosity, the saturation moments normalized by mass remained similar between binder jetted and traditionally compacted samples. Two-winding method measurements indicated a large demagnetizing field for binder jetted samples. Effective medium theory model was used to estimate the effect of remnant porosity on measured magnetic permeabilities. Importance of novel concepts to successfully realize dense cores through additive manufacturing pathways such as binder jetting is highlighted.

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