Effects of Zn additions to highly magnetoelastic FeGa alloys
Author(s) -
T. A. Lograsso,
Nicholas J. Jones,
D. L. Schlagel,
Gabriela Petculescu,
M. WunFogle,
J. B. Restorff,
Arthur E. Clark,
K. B. Hathaway
Publication year - 2015
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 - 10.1063/1.4907181
Subject(s) - magnetostriction , materials science , alloy , valence electron , lattice constant , condensed matter physics , saturation (graph theory) , thermodynamics , electron , analytical chemistry (journal) , chemistry , metallurgy , magnetic field , physics , mathematics , chromatography , quantum mechanics , combinatorics , diffraction , optics
Fe1−xMx (M = Ga, Ge, Si, Al, Mo and x ∼ 0.18) alloys offer an extraordinary combination of magnetoelasticity and mechanical properties. They are rare-earth-free, can be processed using conventional deformation techniques, have high magnetic permeability, low hysteresis, and low magnetic saturation fields, making them attractive for device applications such as actuators and energy harvesters. Starting with Fe-Ga as a reference and using a rigid-band-filling argument, Zhang et al. predicted that lowering the Fermi level by reducing the total number of electrons could enhance magnetoelasticity. To provide a direct experimental validation for Zhang's hypothesis, elemental additions with lower-than-Ga valence are needed. Of the possible candidates, only Be and Zn have sufficient solubility. Single crystals of bcc Fe-Ga-Zn have been grown with up to 4.6 at. % Zn in a Bridgman furnace under elevated pressure (15 bars) in order to overcome the high vapor pressure of Zn and obtain homogeneous crystals. Single-crys...
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