Single Crystal Permanent Magnet: Extraordinary Magnetic Behavior in the ta, Cu and Fe Substituted CeCo5 System
Tej N. Lamichhane, Michael T. Onyszczak, Olena Palasyuk, Saba, Sharikadze, Tae-Hoon Kim, Matthew J. Kramer, R.W. MacCallum, Aleksander L., Wysocki, Manh Cuong Nguyen, Vladimir P. Antropov, Tribhuvan Pandey, David, Parker, Sergey L. Bud'ko, Paul C. Canfield, Andriy Palasyuk

TL;DR
This study synthesizes and characterizes Ta, Cu, and Fe substituted CeCo5 single crystals, revealing extraordinary magnetic properties and defect structures that enhance coercivity and energy product, aiming to develop cost-effective permanent magnets.
Contribution
It reports the first detailed synthesis, structural analysis, and magnetic modeling of Ta, Cu, and Fe substituted CeCo5 single crystals with improved magnetic performance.
Findings
Fe substitution increases Curie temperature and magnetization.
Formation of composite crystals enhances magnetic coercivity.
Achieved (BH)max of approximately 13 MGOe at room temperature.
Abstract
To reduce material and processing costs of commercial permanent magnets and to attempt to fill the empty niche of energy products, 10 - 20 MGOe, between low-flux (ferrites, alnico) and high-flux (Nd2Fe14B- and SmCo5-type) magnets, we report synthesis, structure, magnetic properties and modeling of Ta, Cu and Fe substituted CeCo5. Using a self-flux technique, we grew single crystals of I - Ce15.1Ta1.0Co74.4Cu9.5, II - Ce16.3Ta0.6Co68.9Cu14.2, III - Ce15.7Ta0.6Co67.8Cu15.9, IV - Ce16.3Ta0.3Co61.7Cu21.7 and V - Ce14.3Ta1.0Co62.0Fe12.3Cu10.4. X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD) showed that these materials retain a CaCu5 substructure and incorporate small amounts of Ta in the form of \dumb-bells", filling the 2e crystallographic sites within the 1D hexagonal channel with the 1a Ce site, whereas Co, Cu and Fe are statistically distributed among the 2c and 3g crystallographic sites. Scanning…
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