Nanomaterials (Nov 2022)
Temperature-Dependent Phase Evolution in FePt-Based Nanocomposite Multiple-Phased Magnetic Alloys
Abstract
A quaternary Fe–Pt–Nb–B alloy has been fabricated by the melt spinning method with the purpose of the formation of crystallographically coherent multiple magnetic phases, emerging from the same metastable precursor, as well as to investigate the phase interactions and the influence of their coupling on magnetic performances. For this purpose, extended structural and magnetic investigations were undertaken by making use of X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy, as well as magnetic measurements using SQUID magnetometry. It was documented that intermediate metastable phases formed during primary crystallization, in intermediate stages of annealing, and a growth-dominated mode was encountered for the secondary crystallization stage upon annealing at 700 °C and 800 °C where fcc Fe3Pt and fct Fe2B polycrystalline were formed. The Mössbauer investigations have documented rigorously the hyperfine parameters of each of the observed phases. The fcc A1 FePt phase was shown to exhibit a peculiar ferromagnetic transition, and this transition has been proven to occur gradually between 300 K and 77 K. The magnetic measurements allowed us to identify the annealing at 700 °C as optimal for obtaining good magnetic features. Coercive field dependence shows similarities to the random anisotropy model for samples annealed at 500 °C to 700 °C which are nanocrystalline. These results show good perspectives for use in applications where different magnetic states are required at different operating temperatures.
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