Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10656508 | Journal of Alloys and Compounds | 2014 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Equiatomic NiCoAlFe powder alloys were synthesized by mechanical alloying. The microstructural evolution of the mechanically alloyed powders at different times was followed with X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy. The as-mechanically alloyed powders were subjected to a rapid annealing treatment at 1273Â K and 1473Â K during 3Â min in vacuum. X-ray diffraction studies show the structure of both, the as-mechanically alloyed and annealed powders, consisted in a mixture of nanocrystalline simple phases (FCCÂ +Â BCC). Crystallite size, after annealing, still remained in nanoscale. Coercivity increased due to the decrease in crystallite size and because of the defects caused by mechanical alloying in the as-mechanically alloyed samples; then coercivity decreased due to the phenomenon of random magnetic anisotropy and tended to stabilize with longer alloying times. A similar behavior was observed in annealed samples at 1273Â K. However, random magnetic anisotropy was not observed after annealing at 1473Â K because crystals with larger sizes were produced, and a steady increase in coercivity was observed.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Metals and Alloys
Authors
C.D. Gómez-Esparza, F.J. Baldenebro-López, C.R. Santillán-RodrÃguez, I. Estrada-Guel, J.A. Matutes-Aquino, J.M. Herrera-RamÃrez, R. MartÃnez-Sánchez,