Effect of spin-reorientation-transition of cell boundary phases on the temperature dependence of magnetization and coercivity in Sm2Co17 magnets

Autor: Si-Si Tu, Lei Liu, Bo Zhou, Chuang-Hui Dong, Li-Ming Ye, Ying-Li Sun, Yong Ding, A-Ru Yan, Xin-Biao Mao
Rok vydání: 2023
Předmět:
Zdroj: Chinese Physics B.
ISSN: 1674-1056
DOI: 10.1088/1674-1056/acc80b
Popis: Four Sm2Co17 magnets with spin-reorientation-transition (SRT) of cell boundary phases (CBPs) are prepared by liquid-phase sintering. The temperature of the spin-reorientation-transition cell boundary phase (T SR 1:5) is regulated from 125 K to 195 K by adding 0 wt.%, 3 wt.%, 6 wt.%, and 9 wt.% Dy88Cu12 alloy powder. The effect of SRT in Sm2Co17 magnet CBPs on the temperature dependence of the magnetization (M-T) and coercivity (H-T) is systematically investigated. The temperature dependence of the magnetization is influenced by SRT in CBPs. The M-T curves measured during the heating process are larger than those measured during the cooling process when T < T SR 1:5. When T = T SR 1:5, there is a bifurcation point. When T > T SR 1:5, the M-T curves overlaps, and the M-T derivation curve shows that the magnetization of the magnet has a low temperature dependence of the magnetization after the T SR 1:5. With increasing T SR 1:5, the initial temperature of the low temperature dependence of magnetization shifts towards a higher temperature. The coercivity temperature coefficient becomes positive as the SRT effect increases, and the temperature range of the positive coercivity temperature coefficient moves towards higher temperatures as the T SR 1:5 increases. This reveals that SRT in CBPs has little effect on the temperature dependence of magnetization above T SR 1:5, while the temperature dependence of coercivity is optimized. The temperature range of magnetization and coercivity with low temperature dependence tends towards higher temperatures, which is conducive to the preparation of magnets with a low temperature coefficient at higher temperatures.
Databáze: OpenAIRE