Abstract
Melt-spun Fe100-xNbx and Fe100-xTax alloys consisting of a hexagonal (C14) Laves phase and an iron-based bcc phase were found to exhibit room-temperature coercivities up to 0.45 and 0.48 kOe, respectively. The non-equilibrium C14 structures in the melt-spun alloys are characterized by a smaller unit cell volume, a higher Curie temperature and, presumably, a greater concentration of Fe compared to the C14 structures in the alloys annealed at 1533 K. The room-temperature coercivity, which correlates with the C14 lattice contraction, is believed to be caused by the magnetocrystalline anisotropy of the non-equilibrium Laves phase with the latter being magnetically coupled with the Fe phase via an intergranular exchange interaction. On the other hand, a coercivity of around 0.3 kOe persists in the melt-spun alloys above the Curie temperature of the C14 phase. This high-temperature coercivity may originate from the shape or strain anisotropy of the Fe phase particles. The energy density of the reported two-phase alloys is not sufficiently high to consider them potential hard magnetic materials. However, the pure non-equilibrium Fe2+δNb and Fe2+δTa compounds may be of interest if they can be isolated and textured.
Highlights
It was rather surprising to discover coercivity of almost 0.5 kOe in the Fe-Nb and Fe-Ta alloys where the C14 structure was present alongside the magnetically soft Fe phase
We demonstrate that in rapidly solidified alloys the TC of the Fe-rich C14 phase can exceed room temperature and that this phase strongly influences the semi-hard magnetic properties of these alloys
It may be noted that the C14 lattice parameters determined for the Fe71Nb28 single-phase alloy [a = 0.4812(2) nm, c = 0.7846(2) nm] are in a good agreement with those reported in Ref. 10, whereas the parameters determined for the stoichiometric Fe66.6Ta33.4 structure [a = 0.4819(2) nm, c = 0.7867(2) nm] are close to those reported in Ref. 13
Summary
It was rather surprising to discover coercivity of almost 0.5 kOe in the Fe-Nb and Fe-Ta alloys where the C14 structure was present alongside the magnetically soft Fe phase. Laves phase reported in the Fe-Nb and Fe-Ta systems; the structures are characterized by wide homogeneity ranges and form eutectic alloys with the Fe phase.7,8 Neither Fe2Nb nor Fe2Ta stoichiometric compounds are known to exhibit ferromagnetism.
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