Abstract

Mn-Zn ferrite samples prepared by conventional solid state reaction method and sintering at 1325 °C were Co-enriched by addition of CoO up to 6000 ppm and characterized versus frequency (DC – 1GHz), peak polarization (2 mT – 200 mT), and temperature (23 °C – 120 °C). The magnetic losses at room temperature are observed to pass through a deep minimum value around 4000 ppm CoO at all polarizations values. This trend is smoothed out either by approaching the MHz range or by increasing the temperature. Conversely, the initial permeability attains its maximum value around the same CoO content, while showing moderate monotonical decrease with increasing CoO at the typical working temperatures of 80 – 100 °C. The energy losses, measured by a combination of fluxmetric and transmission line methods, are affected by the eddy currents, on the conventional 5 mm thick ring samples, only beyond a few MHz. Their assessment relies on the separation of rotational and domain wall processes, which can be done by analysis of the complex permeability and its frequency behavior. This permits one, in particular, to calculate the magnetic anisotropy and its dependence on CoO content and temperature and bring to light its decomposition into the host lattice and Co2+ temperature dependent contributions. The temperature and doping dependence of initial permeability and magnetic losses can in this way be qualitatively justified, without invoking the passage through zero value of the effective anisotropy constant upon doping.

Highlights

  • The introduction of additional oxides is the classical strategy adopted for improving the broadband soft magnetic properties of Mn-Zn ferrites

  • A broadband investigation of permeability and loss behavior of sintered CoO-doped Mn-Zn ferrites has been made as a function of CoO content, peak polarization, and temperature

  • Magnetic softening by CoO addition, namely increase of the initial permeability and decrease of the magnetic losses, is observed to occur at room temperature for cCo < ∼ 5000 ppm

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Summary

Introduction

The introduction of additional oxides is the classical strategy adopted for improving the broadband soft magnetic properties of Mn-Zn ferrites. That in the polycrystalline specimen the easy axes are uniformly distributed in the half-space and if we denote with K the average anisotropy constant, including the effects of the local demagnetizing fields, we estimate, with reasonable approximation, the DC relative rotational permeability of the ferrite sample as μDC,rot

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