Regulation of the grain boundary CeFe2 phase via Cu addition for anisotropic Ce–Fe–B magnet fabrication
Abstract
A low melting point rare earth (RE) rich phase is essential for fabricating anisotropic nanocrystalline RE–Fe–B magnets. Ce–Fe–B alloys exhibit distinctive metallurgical behavior due to the precipitation of CeFe2 phase, which reduces the RE-rich phase content. To date, developing anisotropic Ce–Fe–B magnets by eliminating CeFe2 phase has not been successful. Here, we propose an alternative strategy to take advantage of CeFe2 phase by modifying its physical properties via Cu doping. The segregation of Cu at grain boundaries changes the phase transition behavior of CeFe2 phase. By preparing annealed CeFe2−xCux alloys, it was found that the melting temperature of the CeFe2 phase decreased from 1198 K for x = 0 to 973 K for x = 0.2. For the nanocrystalline Ce16Fe78−xCuxB6 (x = 0–2.0 at%) alloys, Cu doping transforms the morphology of Ce(Fe, Cu)2 phase from bulk aggregate to elongated shape, indicating increased flowability and wettability. The improved wettability of Ce(Fe, Cu)2 phase with low melting-point in the grain boundary facilitates the texture development during hot-deformation. As a result, the hot-deformed Ce16Fe76Cu2B6 magnet exhibits pronounced magnetic anisotropy with maximum energy product (BH)max of 22.5 kA m−3, coercivity Hcj of 109 kA m−1, and remanence Jr of 0.54 T. On the contrary, the hot-deformed Ce16Fe78B6 magnet shows isotropic behavior with (BH)max of 0.9 kA m−3, Hcj of 27 kA m−1, and Jr of 0.15 T. This work provides a practical process for fabricating anisotropic Ce–Fe–B permanent magnets by tuning the properties of CeFe2 phase.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Celebrating 30 years of materials science and engineering at South China University of Technology

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