Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1803494 Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials 2008 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Precipitates heavily influence the magnetic properties of electrical steels, either as a key controlled requirement as part of the manufacturing process or as an unwanted harmful residual in the final product. In this current work copper-manganese sulphides precipitates are the primary inhibitor species in the conventional grain-oriented (CGO) steels examined and grain boundary pinning is effective at a mean precipitate size of 30–70 nm. The growth of CuMnS has been studied and the results show that a precipitate size above ∼100 nm allows the onset of secondary recrystallisation in the heating conditions applied.The effect of precipitates on the magnetic properties of both grain-oriented and non-oriented steels in their final product form is then examined. Examples of grain-oriented material still containing large numbers of precipitates clearly show the detrimental effects with increases in total power loss of 40% or more. Loss deterioration by about 20% is also seen in samples of high silicon non-oriented material in which titanium carbo-nitride precipitates have been observed. In this case the precipitates are believed to have formed during cooling after final annealing. Finally a grain-oriented steel with a large number of very small precipitates, which do not seem to have any harmful effect on the magnetic properties, is demonstrated.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Condensed Matter Physics
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