26 research outputs found

    Pinning Fields In Amorphous Materials

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    The stress and field dependence of the pinning field Hp of ribbons of the composition Fe73.5Cu1Nb3Si 13.5B9 and Co73.5Cu1Nb 3Si13.5B9 is compared with that of the coercivity HC. The similar character of HC(σ) and Hp(σ) indicates a strong correlation between these two properties. At higher external stresses HC(σ) and H p(σ) depend on a premagnetizing procedure. This can be explained assuming a different domain structure.731057275729New University of Lisbon,UNINOVA,Universiteit van Amsterda

    The Influence Of Quenching Rate On Magnetic Properties Of Amorphous Ribbons

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    Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)Five sets of amorphous ribbons of the composition Fe73.5Cu 1Nb3Si13.5B9 produced with different quenching rates (QR) were studied in order to verify the influence of the topological disorder on magnetic properties. For this purpose several magnetic methods were applied. Significant differences have been found between the results of magnetic disaccommodation He·Δμ/μ, pinning field Hp and stress dependence of the magnetic permeability μ/μ0(σ) of as-cast materials produced at different QR. The values of He·Δμ/μ and Hp are directly proportional to the disorder degree of the samples. The μ/μ0(σ) curves display broad maxima, which are found to be related to the quenched-in stresses. In contrast with these results, no significant effects of the amorphous structure on the Curie temperature and Mössbauer spectra were found, because other parameters are dominating.7310660366052011/01071-3; FAPESP; São Paulo Research FoundationFundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP

    Magnetic Properties Of Amorphous Co75-xfexsi15b10 (0 < X < 50)

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    On amorphous ribbons of the composition Co75-xFexSi15B10 (0 ≤ x ≤ 50) the Curie temperature TC, the saturation magnetization and the magnetostriction constant λS were determined. The concentration dependence of TC was analyzed using a molecular field model. The concentration and temperature dependence of the saturation magnetization was analysed assuming a superposition of the Fe- and Co-moments respectively. λS(x, T) was analysed assuming the existence of a single and a two ion term. © 1992.1161-2154158Madurga, Vázquez, Hernando, Nielson, (1984) Solid State Commun., 52, p. 701Hernando, Influence of the Tensile Stress on the Magnetostriction Resistivity and Magnetic Anisotropy of Co-Rich Metallic Glasses. TSRO and CSRO Correlation (1988) Physica Scripta, 24 T, p. 11Herzer, (1986) Intern. Conf. Soft Magn. Mater., 7, p. 335Hilzinger, Herzer, Wengert, (1985) Rapidly Quenched Metals, 5, p. 1263. , S. Steeb, H. Warlimont, North-Holland, AmsterdamNarita, Yamasaki, Fukunaga, Measurement of saturation magnetostriction of a thin amorphous ribbon by means of small-angle magnetization rotation (1980) IEEE Transactions on Magnetics, p. 435Fujimori, Kikuchi, Obi, Masumoto, (1976) Sci. Rep. Res. Inst. Tohoku Univ., 26 A, p. 36Xianyu, Ishikawa, Fukunaga, Watanabe, (1985) J. Phys. F, 15, p. 1799Kouvel, (1969) Magnetism and Metallurgy, p. 523. , A.E. Berkowitz, E. Kneller, Academic Press, New YorkLuborsky, (1980) Ferromagnetic Materials, 1, p. 494. , E.P. Wohlfarth, North-Holland, AmsterdamO'Handley, (1978) Phys. Rev. B, 18, p. 93

    MAGNETIC PERMEABILITY AFTEREFFECT IN FeNiSiB AMORPHOUS ALLOYS NEAR THE CURIE TEMPERATURE

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    The temperature dependence of the magnetic aftereffect, ÆŠB/B, has been investigated between room temperature and Tc in two low-Tc FeNiSiB amorphous alloys. ÆŠB/B is observed to steadily decrease with T in a region near Tc, where the magnetic permeability stays almost constant. The results are analysed in terms of the structural model for the aftereffect

    MAGNETOSTRICTION DEPENDENCE OF THE MAGNETIC PERMEABILITY AFTEREFFECT OF AMORPHOUS FERROMAGNETS AT LOW TEMPERATURES

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    Low-temperature measurements show that the magnetic permeability aftereffect of Fe-based alloys is always proportional to the square of the magnetostriction constant, indicating that the nature of the ordering processes responsible for the aftereffect is essentially the same over an extended range of temperatures

    The Local Atomic Joule Magnetostriction of Fe81Ga19

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    Using X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy (XAS) in differential mode (DiffXAS), the magnetostriction of a Fe81Ga19 splat cooled ribbon has been measured and the strain coefficients quantified. Due to the local atomic nature of XAS, this represents the first microscopic analysis of such a system, and was made possible only by recent advances in synchrotron radiation based techniques, capable of detecting atomic strains on the scale of femtometres [1]. Previously, magnetostriction measurements have relied on macroscopic techniques, commonly via strain gauges. However, such measurements on thin films and ribbons, which tend to be of the greatest importance from a technical perspective, are notoriously difficult. This is in part due to the measured strains being extremely small over a sample thickness of a few tens of microns, but also due to the practicalities of coupling such a sample to a sensor. Consequently, published magnetostriction coefficients vary immensely. In some cases, giant magnetostrictions have been reported for Fe(1-x)Gax ribbons [2][3] although doubt has recently been cast upon their validity [4]. This serves to assert a need for a more fundamental approach to measuring magnetostrictive strains. A need which is satisfied by DiffXAS. Being based upon XAS, DiffXAS probes changes in local atomic structures and is just dependent upon the short-range order of the first one or two atomic shells surrounding an absorbing atom. However, whilst even giant magnetostrictive strains exhibited by a number of rare-earth based Fe alloys are on the very limits of detection by conventional XAS techniques, DiffXAS offers an increase in sensitivity of two orders of magnitude and so makes such strains easily measurable. Direct detection of strains on the scale of tens or hundreds of ppm then becomes possible. Furthermore, in principle, this is true for any type of strain that is reproducible upon the modulation of some external sample property [5]. Additionally, since x-ray absorption is chemically selective, these structural changes may be viewed from different positions within the crystal lattice, and so the underlying significance of different atomic species in the overall process elucidated. Contributions from different types of bonds within the structure may then be decoupled and analysed. Such information has immense value when trying to obtain fundamental knowledge of atomic strains, and particularly when attempting to verify theoretical models. Concerning Fe(1-x)Gax, a theory for the observed strain enhancement was first put forward by Wu [6] in 2002, which has more recently been developed by Cullen et al [7] after modelled the behaviour of the material’s magnetocrystalline anisotropy. Experimental verification of these proposals has yet to be presented, but is something that DiffXAS has the potential to provide. Using this technique, we have focused on the problem of enhanced magnetostriction observed in the Fe(1-x)Gax system. Such systems have attracted significant interest from a technological and device applications perspective since, although they do not possess truly giant magnetostrictions, they are both absent of expensive rare-earth components and have desirable mechanical properties. They also show appreciable low-field magnetostriction, saturating at fields of only several hundred Oersteds. Working within these saturation conditions, DiffXAS detects the changes in photoelectron scattering path length induced by structural distortions that occur when the sample’s magnetisation vector is modulated between two states – parallel and perpendicular to the x-ray polarisation vector. Subsequent data analysis uses a framework of Cartesian tensors to model the structural properties of the sample, and ab initio XAS theory to model the observed perturbations. From this, the atomic strain tensor may be derived and related to the sample magnetisation vector in order to find the coefficients of the Joule magnetostriction tensor [8]. These coefficients may then be reduced to the more familiar macroscopic 100 and 111 coefficients by exploiting the crystal symmetry elements [8]. Working on a splat cooled foil of Fe81Ga19, preliminary analyses performed with this technique have yielded a magnetostriction coefficient of (3/2)100 = 250±20ppm (111 coefficient is approximately zero for this composition), based upon a disordered A2 structure, determined from analysis of the sample’s conventional XAS signal. This analysis failed to detect the D03 structure reported by some authors for this composition. Further experiments are planned to examine the full range of compositions over which magnetostriction enhancement is observed in this system. [1] R.F. Pettifer, O. Mathon, S. Pascarelli, M.D. Cooke, M.R. J. Gibbs, Nature 435, 79 (2005) [2] M.C. Zhang, H.L. Jiang, X.X. Gao, J. Zhu, and S.Z. Zhou, J. Appl. Phys. 99, 023903 (2006) [3] G.D. Liu, L.B. Liu, Z.H. Liu, M. Zhang, J.L. Chen, J.Q. Li, G.H. Wu, Y.X. Li, J.P. Qu, T.S. Chin, J. Appl. Phys. 84, 2124 (2004) [4] R. Grössinger, R. Sato Turtelli, N. Mehmood, S. Heiss, H. Müller, C. Bormio-Nunes, J. Mag. Mag. Mater., in press [5] M. P. Ruffoni, R.F. Pettifer, S. Pascarelli, A. Trapananti, O. Mathon in X-Ray Absorption Fine Structure XAFS13, edited by B. Hedman and P. Pianetta, AIP Conf. Proc. No. 882 (AIP, 2007), p. 838. [6] R. Wu, J. Appl. Phys. 91, 7358 (2002) [7] J. Cullen, P. Zhao, M. Wuttig, J. Appl. Phys. 101, 123922 (2007) [8] E du T, de Lacheisserie in Magnetostriction: Theory and Applications of Magnetoelasticity (CRC Press, 1993), p133 and 161-162Submitted versio
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