Abstract

To explore the feasibility of deep grain-size refinement in overcoming the problem of traditional Br-Hci trade-off in bulk permanent magnets, the effect of deformation temperature on the texture strength, grain refining, and magnetic properties of slow-deformed Nd-Fe-B magnets was systematically studied. As a result, strong textures with gradual grain refining from conventionally large size of DL = 650 nm to small nanoscale size of DL = 53 nm (DL denotes the lateral size of the aligned plate-like grains) are observed as the temperature reduces from Td = 650 °C to Td = 450 °C. Moreover, magnetic observations show a simultaneous increase in remanence and coercivity as the grain refines from DL = 650 nm to DL = 127 nm. The increase in coercivity results from the grain size refinement as well as the smaller aspect ratio of the plate-like grains, and the increase in remanence results from the improved texture homogeneity. As compared with the DL = 650 nm magnets, the simultaneous increase in remanence and coercivity leads to optimum enhancements of 57% in coercivity, 10% in remanence, and 25% in energy product, which demonstrate the feasibility of near-nanoscale grain refinement in overcoming the traditional Br-Hci trade-off for improved (BH)max values. The failure of higher coercivities in the DL ≤ 80 nm magnets is closely related with the defect effects of the grain boundaries. Mechanisms explaining the grain refining and texture changing behavior were also discussed.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call