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Rapid-thermal-process pre-treatment promoted precipitation towards strengthening hard magnetism of Sm2Co17-type magnets

  • Xin Song
  • , Wentao Jia
  • , Yao Liu
  • , Jian Li
  • , Dan Huang
  • , Xiaolian Liu
  • , Lizhong Zhao
  • , Xianglong Zhou
  • , Yang Ren
  • , Feng Liu
  • , Tianyu Ma
  • Frontier Institute of Science and Technology
  • Northeastern University China
  • Hangzhou Dianzi University
  • Ganjiang Innovation Academy
  • City University of Hong Kong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Dislocations can act as heterogeneous nucleation sites but their annihilations upon heating sacrifice point defects nearby, weakening the driving force for precipitate nucleation. In order to keep a high density of dislocations and point defects together, here rapid-thermal-process (RTP) pre-treatment was carried out to promote the precipitate nucleation in Sm2Co17-type permanent magnets that evolve gradual formation and dissociation of dislocations during concurrent precipitation and recrystallization. As exhibited in a model magnet Sm25Co49.3Fe17.1Cu5.6Zr3.0 (wt.%) with high-density dislocations at solution-treated state, the RTP pre-treatment can induce excess point defects owing to the migration of solute atoms towards equilibrium state and the quenching of point defects, and suppress the early-stage diffusion-controlled dissociation of dislocations. After whole-process isothermal aging and slow cooling, the RTP pre-treated magnet possesses much higher fraction of hexagonal SmCo5 (1:5H) nanoprecipitates than the non-pre-treated one, giving rise to effective enhancements in coercivity Hcj from 26.20 to 30.34 kOe and in knee-point field Hk from 14.43 to 19.20 kOe. These findings add insight into controlling precipitation in dislocation-bearing supersaturated solid solutions, which are feasible for strengthening the Sm-Co-based magnets.

Original languageEnglish
Article number119966
JournalActa Materialia
Volume274
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Aug 2024

Keywords

  • Dislocations
  • Point defects
  • Precipitation
  • Sm-Co magnets

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