| Literature DB >> 29236194 |
Yingfei Li1,2, Na Tian1, Xiaodong Fan1, Caiyin You3, Wenli Pei4, Zhenxiang Cheng5.
Abstract
Low coercivity is the main disadvantage of RE-Fe-B permanent magnets containing highly abundant rare earths (RE: La, Ce) from the application point of view, even though they exhibit many cost and resource advantages. In this work, an industrial mixed rare earth alloy (RE100 = La30.6Ce50.2Pr6.4Nd12.8) with a high amount of the more abundant elements was adopted to fabricate RE-Fe-B permanent magnets by means of mechanical alloying accompanied by post-annealing. A synergetic effect towards enhancing the coercivity was observed after co-doping with Dy2O3 and Ca, with the coercivity increasing from 2.44 kOe to 11.43 kOe for co-dopant percentages of 7 wt.% Dy2O3 + 2.3 wt.% Ca. Through analysis of the phase constituents and microstructure, it was determined that part of the Dy atoms entered the matrix of RE2Fe14B phase to enhance the magnetocrystalline anisotropy; due to the reductive effect of Ca on Dy2O3, nanocrystals of Dy-rich RE2Fe14B were present throughout the matrix, which could increase the resistance to domain wall movement. These are the dominant factors behind the improvement of the coercivity of the RE-Fe-B magnets with highly abundant RE elements.Entities:
Keywords: Abundant RE-Fe-B magnets; Coercivity; Dy2O3 and ca co-dopants; Synergetic effect
Year: 2017 PMID: 29236194 PMCID: PMC5729178 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-017-2407-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1a XRD patterns of samples annealed at 700 °C; b enlarged XRD patterns with slow scanning from 37° to 45°; c lattice parameters a, c, and cell volume for the samples
Fig. 2Magnetization variation of the samples with temperature from 300 K to 700 K
Fig. 3Room temperature magnetic performance of the samples annealed at 700 °C. The black arrow indicates a region of strong domain pinning
Fig. 4Coercivity of the samples as a function of the annealing temperature
Fig. 5a Bright field TEM image of the RE13.6Fe78.4B8 with 7 wt.%Dy2O3 and 2.3 wt.%Ca co-dopants (inset: selected area diffraction pattern); b STEM image showing the dark coarse grains
Fig. 6a Point detection by EDS on RE13.6Fe78.4B8 sample co-doped with 7 wt.%Dy2O3 and 2.3 wt.%Ca, and b elemental concentration of each detected site
EDS results from points 001 and 002 in Fig. 5b of RE13.6Fe78.4B8 with 7wt.%Dy2O3 and 2.3wt.%Ca co-dopants
| Element (at.%) | Ca | Fe | La | Ce | Pr | Nd | Dy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Point 001 | 12.47 | 72.70 | 3.40 | 5.96 | 1.06 | 1.85 | 2.56 |
| Point 002 | 7.32 | 77.68 | 3.73 | 6.92 | 0.81 | 2.12 | 1.42 |
Note that the concentrations of oxygen and boron are not included because there is less EDS accuracy for the light elements