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Magnetostriction of ternary Fe–Ga–X (X=C,V,Cr,Mn,Co,Rh) alloys
Author(s) -
A. E. Clark,
J. B. Restorff,
M. WunFogle,
K. B. Hathaway,
T. A. Lograsso,
Mingwei Huang,
Eric Summers
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of applied physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.699
H-Index - 319
eISSN - 1089-7550
pISSN - 0021-8979
DOI - 10.1063/1.2670376
Subject(s) - magnetostriction , materials science , ternary operation , alloy , gallium , valence electron , atom (system on chip) , quenching (fluorescence) , saturation (graph theory) , crystallography , condensed matter physics , transition metal , metallurgy , electron , chemistry , magnetic field , fluorescence , physics , quantum mechanics , computer science , programming language , biochemistry , mathematics , combinatorics , embedded system , catalysis
Binary iron-gallium (Galfenol) alloys have large magnetostrictions over a wide temperature range. Single crystal measurements show that additions of 2at.% or greater of 3d and 4d transition elements with fewer (V, Cr, Mo, Mn) and more (Co, Ni, Rh) valence electrons than Fe, all reduce the saturation magnetostriction. Kawamiya and Adachi [J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 31–34, 145 (1983)] reported that the D03 structure is stabilized by 3d transition elements with electron∕atom ratios both less than iron and greater than iron. If D03 ordering decreases the magnetostriction, the maximum magnetostriction should be largest for the (more disordered) binary Fe–Ga alloys as observed. Notably, addition of small amounts of C (0.07, 0.08, and 0.14at.%) increases the magnetostriction of the slow cooled binary alloy to values comparable to the rapidly quenched alloy. We assume that small atom (C, B, N) additions enter interstitially and inhibit ordering, thus maximizing the magnetostriction without quenching.

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