Abstract

We have studied the densification, phase formation, microstructure, and permeability of stoichiometric and Fe-deficient Ni-Cu-Zn ferrites of composition Ni0.30Cu0.20Zn0.50+zFe2-zO4-(z/2) with 0 ≤ z ≤ 0.06 sintered at temperatures from 900 °C to 1150 °C. The shrinkage is shifted from 1000 °C for z = 0 towards lower temperatures and reaches its maximum rate at 900 °C for z = 0.02. Stoichiometric ferrites show regular growth of single-phase ferrite grains if sintered at Ts ≤ 1100 °C. Sintering at 1150 °C leads to the formation of a small amount of Cu2O, triggering exaggerated grain growth. Fe-deficient compositions (z > 0) form Cu-poor stoichiometric ferrites coexisting with a minority CuO phase after sintering at 900–1000 °C. At Ts ≥ 1050 °C, CuO transforms into Cu2O, and exaggerated grain growth is observed. The formation of Cu oxide second phases is investigated using XRD, SEM, and EDX. The permeability of the ferrites increases with sintering temperature up to a maximum permeability of µ = 230 for z = 0 or µ = 580 for z = 0.02, respectively, at Ts = 1000 °C. At higher sintering temperatures, the permeability decreases, which is due to the formation of a microstructure with intra-crystalline porosity in large grains, and a non-magnetic Cu oxide grain boundary phase.

Highlights

  • Ni-Cu-Zn ferrites are an important group of soft magnetic materials for many applications including power ferrites, EMI devices, and multilayer inductors

  • Most studies report on a specific ferrite composition, which is fired at 900 ◦ C using a sintering additive, as well as its microstructure formation, permeability, and DC bias superposition behavior [5,6,7,8]

  • Single-phase ferrite powders were obtained after calcination at 900 ◦ C (XRD results not shown here)

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Summary

Introduction

Ni-Cu-Zn ferrites are an important group of soft magnetic materials for many applications including power ferrites, EMI devices, and multilayer inductors. Many studies were performed to investigate the low-temperature sintering behavior of Ni-Cu-Zn ferrites. Most studies report on a specific ferrite composition, which is fired at 900 ◦ C using a sintering additive, as well as its microstructure formation, permeability, and DC bias superposition behavior [5,6,7,8]. A common feature of low-firing ferrite compositions is a small deficiency of iron oxide in the starting oxide mixture (

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