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High‐temperature magnetostriction of magnetite and titanomagnetites
Author(s) -
Moskowitz Bruce M.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/92jb01846
Subject(s) - magnetostriction , materials science , magnetite , crystallite , saturation (graph theory) , condensed matter physics , curie temperature , titanium , magnetic field , nuclear magnetic resonance , metallurgy , ferromagnetism , physics , mathematics , quantum mechanics , combinatorics
Magnetostriction of synthetic polycrystalline magnetite and titanium‐rich titanomagnetites has been measured from 25°C to their Curie temperatures. These are the first reported measurements of magnetostriction above room temperature for titanomagnetites. The magnetostriction constants are measured with a recording rotating field magnetostrictometer, which uses a strain gage bridge technique and two rotating SmCo 5 permanent magnets. Magnetostriction is recorded continuously as the sample is slowly heated and cooled in a fixed magnetic field. Measurements were made on sintered polycrystalline samples of magnetite, titanomagnetite (Fe 3‐ x Ti x O 4 , x =0.0, 0.4, and 0.6), and an aluminum‐magnesium substituted titanium‐rich titanomagnetite (AMTM60). The thermal dependence of the polycrystalline magnetostriction constant λ s ( T ) varies as (1‐ T / T c ) 1.3 for titanium‐rich titanomagnetites and as (1‐ T / T c ) 0.9 for pure magnetite. the polycrystalline magnetostriction constant is well approximated by a power law equation in terms of the saturation magnetization, λ s ( T )αM s ( T ) n , where n =2.31 (TM0), 3.47 (TM40), 2.75 (TM60), and 2.80 (AMTM60). The magnetostriction results for AMTM60 are in excellent agreement with previous predictions based on domain observations.

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