Abstract

Homogeneous substitution of Dy for Nd in the hard magnetic 2:14:1 phase can effectively enhance coercivity to ensure the high temperature operation, however, inevitably deteriorate remanence at expense. In this work, we performed a comparative investigation of the two magnets prepared by multi-main-phase (co-sintering Nd2Fe14B and (Nd, Dy)2Fe14B powders) and single-main-phase (sintering (Nd, Dy)2Fe14B powders) approaches. The comparative investigation reveals that at the same Dy substitution level (2.16 wt%), such chemically inhomogeneous multi-main-phase magnet possesses better room-temperature magnetic properties as well as thermal stability than those of the single-main-phase one with homogenous Dy distribution in the matrix grains. Room-temperature magnetic properties Hcj = 1664 kA/m, Br = 1.33 T and (BH)max = 350.4 kJ/m3 for the multi-main-phase magnet are all better than those for the single-main-phase magnet with Hcj = 1536 kA/m, Br = 1.29 T and (BH)max = 318.4 kJ/m3. In addition, over the temperature range from 295 to 423 K, both the temperature coefficients of coercivity and remanence for the multi-main-phase magnet are also lower than that for the single-main-phase magnet. Such superior magnetic performance is attributed to the short-range magnetic interactions inside individual 2:14:1 phase grains and the long-range magnetostatic interactions between adjacent grains with inhomogeneous Dy distribution. Our work provides a feasible approach of enhancing coercivity and retaining energy product simultaneously in the Nd-Dy-Fe-B permanent magnets.

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