METHOD OF CREATING A MAGNET
20200035412 ยท 2020-01-30
Inventors
- Shouheng SUN (East Greenwich, RI, US)
- Bo SHEN (Providence, RI, US)
- Adriana MENDOZA-GARCIA (Boston, MA, US)
- Scott K. McCall (Livermore, CA, US)
- Sarah E. Baker (Dublin, CA, US)
Cpc classification
B82Y25/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2999/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2998/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01F1/0306
ELECTRICITY
B22F2998/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01F1/0579
ELECTRICITY
B22F2999/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A method of stabilizing soft particles to create dried nanocomposite magnets includes coating a plurality of soft particles with a layer of SiO.sub.2, the soft particles being nanoparticles, creating a composite by mixing the soft particles with hard phase via a solution phase based assembly, annealing the composite, washing the composite with an alkaline solution to remove SiO.sub.2, and compacting the composite to create dried nanocomposite magnets.
Claims
1. A method of stabilizing soft particles to create dried nanocomposite magnets comprising: coating a plurality of soft particles with a layer of SiO.sub.2, the soft particles being nanoparticles; creating a composite by mixing the soft particles with hard phase via a solution phase based assembly; annealing the composite; washing the composite with an alkaline solution to remove SiO.sub.2; and compacting the composite to create dried nanocomposite magnets.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the soft particles include at least one of the following: Fe, Co, and FeCo.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the hard phase includes at least one of the following: SmCo based compound; or NdFeB based compound.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the hard phase includes at least one of the following: SmCoO; NdFeN-0; SmCo metal alloy; or NdFeB metal alloy.
5. The method of claim 1 wherein the step of annealing the composite includes mixing the nanocomposites with Ca in a reducing atmosphere.
6. The method of claim 4 wherein the reducing atmosphere includes Argon and 4% hydrogen.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the step of annealing the composite is done at substantially 850 degrees Celsius.
8. The method of claim 1 wherein the alkaline solution is an aqueous solution of NaOH or KOH.
9. The method of claim 1 wherein the solution phase based assembly includes SiO.sub.2 coated hard magnetic particles.
10. A method of stabilizing soft particles for generating a nanocomposite for a magnet comprises: assembling a pre-synthesized Fe nanoparticles which are coated with SiO.sub.2 (silica) and Fe/SiO.sub.2 nanoparticles with SmCoOH to form a SmCoOH and Fe/SiO.sub.2 mixture; obtaining SmCo5-Fe/SiO.sub.2 composites by annealing the mixture at 850 C. in the presence of Ca; and washing the composites with NaOH/water and conducting a warm compaction to produce exchange coupled SmCo5-Fe nanocomposites with Fe NPs controlled at 12 nm to stabilize a soft magnetic phase in a hard magnetic matrix with enhanced magnetic performance.
11. A method comprising: stabilizing Fe nanoparticles in high temperature annealing conditions for a preparation of exchange-coupled SmCo5-Fe nanocomposites.
12. The method of claim 11 wherein stabilizing comprises: stabilizing pre-synthesized Fe nanoparticles using a SiO.sub.2 coating; obtaining composites once Fe/SiO.sub.2 is mixed with SmCoOH and annealed at 850 C. in the presence of Ca and KCl; removing the SiO.sub.2 coating by immersing the SmCo5-Fe/SiO.sub.2 composite in NaOH, followed by water and ethanol washing; and warmly compacting the composite pellets at room temperature at 1.5 GPa.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings where:
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0025] The subject innovation is now described with reference to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals are used to refer to like elements throughout. In the following description, for purposes of explanation, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. It may be evident, however, that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known structures and devices are shown in block diagram form in order to facilitate describing the present invention.
[0026] As used herein, the terms soft particles, soft phase, or soft phase particles are used interchangeably to denote soft particles such as Fe, Co, FeCo, combinations thereof, or elements/compounds with similar properties. Further, the terms hard particles, hard phase, or hard phase particles are used interchangeably to denote hard particles such as SmCo or NdFeB based alloys such as SmCoO, NdFeNO, SmCo NdFeB, or compounds/alloys having like properties.
[0027] In an embodiment, the subject technology relates to a reliable chemical process of stabilizing Fe nanoparticles (NPs) in high temperature annealing conditions for the preparation of exchange-coupled SmCo.sub.5Fe nanocomposites. An SiO.sub.2 coating is used to stabilize the pre-synthesized Fe NPs. Once Fe/SiO.sub.2 is mixed with SmCoOH and annealed at 850 C. in the presence of Ca and KCl, the SmCo.sub.5Fe/SiO.sub.2, composites are obtained. The SiO.sub.2 coating can be removed by immersing the SmCo.sub.5Fe/SiO.sub.2 composite in 10 NaOH, followed by water and ethanol washing. The SmCo.sub.5Fe powder show a two-phase behavior due to the loosening packing of SmCo.sub.5 and Fe NPs. After warm compaction at room temperature at 1.5 GPa, the composite pellets show a single-phase behavior, indicating the close contact and exchange-coupling of SmCo.sub.5 and Fe NPs. In such a way, 2 nm Fe NPs are stabilized in the Fe nanocomposites. This can be extended to the preparations of SmCo-M or NdFeB-M (M=Fe, Co, or FeCo) with tunable magnetic properties for permanent magnetic applications.
[0028] More generally, the subject technology relates to a new strategy of stabilizing soft particles for generating a nanocomposite for a magnet. For example, in one embodiment of a method of the subject technology, Fe nanoparticles are stabilized in the preparation of SmCo.sub.5-Fe nanocomposites. Pre-synthesized Fe NPs which are coated with SiO.sub.2 (silica) and Fe/SiO.sub.2 NPs are assembled with SmCoOH to form SmCoOH and Fe/SiO.sub.2 mixture. This mixture is annealed at 850 C. in the presence of Ca and SmCo.sub.5Fe/SiO.sub.2 composites are obtained. The composites are then washed with NaOH/water, and warm compaction is conducted. In this way, exchange coupled SmCo.sub.5Fe nanocomposites with Fe NPs controlled at 12 nm are produced. The method serves, in accordance with the subject technology, to stabilize soft magnetic phase in a hard magnetic matrix with enhanced magnetic performance.
[0029] In prior methods for the synthesis of nanocomposites, one barrier to success lay in the stabilization of nanoscale Fe, or Fe NPs, in the high temperature SmCo preparation condition. In the earlier tests of stabilizing FePt NPs in the high temperature annealing condition for their structure transformation from magnetically soft AlFePt to magnetically hard L10-FePt NPs, a robust inorganic coating layer, such as MgO or SiO.sub.2, has been applied to stabilize FePt NPs against sintering at temperatures as high as 800 C. MgO is removed by acid washing while SiO2 is dissolved with a base to give well-dispersed L10-FePt NPs. We tested the MgO coating and found the MgO could also help to stabilize Fe NPs at high temperatures, however, the acid washing process was incompatible with the condition used to stabilize Fe NPs. We then studied the SiO.sub.2 coating, and found that this SiO.sub.2 coating could indeed help to stabilize Fe NPs even in the reductive conversion of SmCoOH to SmCo. Therefore we developed a new chemical approach to SmCo.sub.5Fe nanocomposites with controlled Fe NP size.
[0030] Referring now to
[0031] For the SmCo.sub.5, its single domain size is substantially 100-300 nm and domain wall width is substantially 6-7 nm. For effective exchange coupling, the soft phase below 15 nm should have good exchange coupling with SmCo.sub.5 hard phase. For example, for the hard-soft composites to show efficient coupling, the soft phase can be twice of the domain wall width of the hard phase, which renders the soft phases to nanometer scale. In example synthetic process, we chose monodisperse 12 nm Fe NPs as an example of the soft phase to demonstrate the new strategy of forming SmCo.sub.5Fe with Fe being in 12 nm. We prepared the Fe NPs by the decomposition of Fe(CO).sub.5 in the presence of oleyamine and hexadecylammoniurn chloride (HDA.HC1) at 180 C.
[0032] Referring now to
[0033] The Fe phase matches well with the standard bcc pattern of Fe. The Fe NPs with SiO.sub.2 was coated by controlled hydrolysis and condensation of tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS) in the presence of Fe NPs. In this coating process, 20 mg Fe NPs were firstly dissolved in a mixing solution of 40 ml cyclohexane and 1 ml polyoxyethylene(5)nonylphenyl ether (Igepal CO-520). Sequentially, 0.4 ml TEOS was added in the solution followed by an injection of 0.4 nil 28% ammonia solution. TEOS was hydrolyzed around Fe NPs in the presence of ammonia to form a uniform SiO.sub.2 coating shell around each Fe NP.
[0034] To embed monodisperse Fe NPs into the SmCos matrix, as described herein, we must first prepare the SmCos. The direct synthesis of SmCo using organic-based chemical protocols is challenging. It is difficult to obtain metallic alloys from the simultaneous and homogeneous reduction of Co.sup.2+ and Sm.sup.3+ in solution due to the huge reduction potential difference between Co(II) (0.28 V) and Sm(III) (2.30 V), as well as the NP instability against oxidation. Therefore, nanostructured SmCos can be synthesized by reductive annealing of SmCo-oxide precursors at high temperature, similar to the commercial fabrication of SmCo magnets by high temperature reduction of Sm-oxide and Co-oxide by CaH2.
[0035] In the present example, we first precipitated aqueous solution of SmCl.sub.3 and CoCl.sub.2 by adding 5 M KOH at 100 C. drop-wise. After leaving the reaction to reflux for 5 hours, the solution was cooled down to room temperature and brownish precipitation was collected by centrifugation. Referring now to
[0036] Referring again to
[0037] Referring now to
[0038] Referring now to
[0039] Referring now to
[0040] In the embodiment described, to ensure the SmCo.sub.2 and Fe NPs are in tight contact we compacted the powders. Temperature and pressure-holding time during the procedure can have an impact on the success of the procedure. A long holding time may cause the formation of graded interface, which is good for exchange-coupling. On the other hand, high temperature may lead to grain growth so our compaction was conducted at room temperature. Referring now to
[0041] Although the subject matter has been described in language specific to structural features and/or methodological acts, it is to be understood that the subject matter defined in the appended claims is not necessarily limited to the specific features or acts described above. Rather, the specific features and acts described above are disclosed as example forms of implementing the claims.