Abstract

Co 2Z hexaferrite Ba 3Co 2Fe 24O 41 was prepared by a mixed oxalate co-precipitation route and the standard ceramic technology. XRD studies show that at T<1300 °C different ferrite phases coexist with the M-type hexaferrite as majority phase between 1000 and 1100 °C and the Y-type ferrite at 1230 °C. The Z-type material has its stability interval between 1300 and 1350 °C. Both synthesis routes result in almost single-phase Z-type ferrites after calcination at 1330 °C, intermediate grinding and sintering at 1330 °C. The permeability of Co 2Z-type ferrite of about μ=20 is stable up to several 100 MHz, with maximum losses μ′′ around 700 MHz. Addition of 3 wt% Bi 2O 3 as sintering aid shifts the temperature of maximum shrinkage down to 950 °C and enables sintering of Z-type ferrite powders at 950 °C. However, the permeability is reduced to μ=3. It is shown here for the first time that Co 2Z ferrite is not stable under these conditions; partial thermal decomposition into other hexagonal ferrites is found by XRD studies. This is accompanied by a significant decrease of permeability. This shows that Co 2Z hexagonal ferrite is not suitable for the fabrication of multilayer inductors for high-frequency applications via the low-temperature ceramic cofiring technology since the material is not compatible with the typical process cofiring temperature of 950 °C.

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