WO1988003699A1 - Near-zero magnetostrictive glassy metal alloys for high frequency applications - Google Patents

Near-zero magnetostrictive glassy metal alloys for high frequency applications Download PDF

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WO1988003699A1
WO1988003699A1 PCT/US1987/002802 US8702802W WO8803699A1 WO 1988003699 A1 WO1988003699 A1 WO 1988003699A1 US 8702802 W US8702802 W US 8702802W WO 8803699 A1 WO8803699 A1 WO 8803699A1
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ranges
alloys
glassy
atom percent
formula
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Ryusuke Hasegawa
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Allied Corporation
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22CALLOYS
    • C22C19/00Alloys based on nickel or cobalt
    • C22C19/07Alloys based on nickel or cobalt based on cobalt
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22CALLOYS
    • C22C45/00Amorphous alloys
    • C22C45/04Amorphous alloys with nickel or cobalt as the major constituent
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01FMAGNETS; INDUCTANCES; TRANSFORMERS; SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR THEIR MAGNETIC PROPERTIES
    • H01F1/00Magnets or magnetic bodies characterised by the magnetic materials therefor; Selection of materials for their magnetic properties
    • H01F1/01Magnets or magnetic bodies characterised by the magnetic materials therefor; Selection of materials for their magnetic properties of inorganic materials
    • H01F1/03Magnets or magnetic bodies characterised by the magnetic materials therefor; Selection of materials for their magnetic properties of inorganic materials characterised by their coercivity
    • H01F1/12Magnets or magnetic bodies characterised by the magnetic materials therefor; Selection of materials for their magnetic properties of inorganic materials characterised by their coercivity of soft-magnetic materials
    • H01F1/14Magnets or magnetic bodies characterised by the magnetic materials therefor; Selection of materials for their magnetic properties of inorganic materials characterised by their coercivity of soft-magnetic materials metals or alloys
    • H01F1/147Alloys characterised by their composition
    • H01F1/153Amorphous metallic alloys, e.g. glassy metals
    • H01F1/15316Amorphous metallic alloys, e.g. glassy metals based on Co

Definitions

  • This invention relates to glassy metal alloys with near-zero magnetostriction which are especially suited for use in high frequency applications.
  • Saturation magnetostriction ⁇ s is related to the fractional change in length of ⁇ l/l that occurs in a magnetic material on going from the demagnetized to the saturated, ferromagnetic state.
  • the value of magnetostriction a dimensionless quantity, is often given in units of microstrains (i.e., a microstrain is a fractional change in length of one part per million).
  • Ferromagnetic alloys of low magnetostriction are desirable for several interrelated reasons: 1. Soft magnetic properties (low coercivity, high permeability) are generally obtained when both the saturation magnetostriction ⁇ s and the magnetocrystalline anisotropy K approach zero.
  • alloys of lower magnetostriction will show lower dc coercivities and higher permeabilities.
  • Such alloys are suitable for various soft magnetic applications.
  • Magnetic properties of such zero magnetostrictive materials are insensitive to mechanical strains. When this is the case, there is little need for stress-relief annealing after winding, punching or other physical handling needed to form a device from such material. In contrast, magnetic properties of stress-sensitive materials, such as the crystalline alloys, are seriously degraded by such cold working and such materials must be carefully annealed. 3.
  • the low dc coercivity of zero magnetostrictive materials carries over to ac operating conditions where again low coercivity and high permeability are realized (provided the magneto-crystalline anisotropy is not too large and the resistivity not too small).
  • zero magnetostrictive magnetic alloys (of moderate or low magnetocrystalline anisotropy) are useful where low loss and high ac permeability are required.
  • Such applications include a variety of tape-wound and laminated core devices, such as power transformers, signal transformers, magnetic recording heads and the like.
  • electromagnetic devices containing zero magnetostrictive materials generate no acoustic noise under AC excitation, while this is the reason for the lower core loss mentioned above, it is also a desirable characteristic in itself because it eliminates the hum inherent in many electromagnetic devices.
  • Nickel-iron alloys containing approximately 80% nickel (“80 nickel permalloys");
  • Zero magnetostrictive alloys based on the binaries but with small additions of other elements such as molybdenum, copper or aluminum to provide specific property changes. These include, for example, 4% Mo, 79% Ni, 17% Fe (sold under the designation Moly Permalloy) for increased resistivity and permeability; permalloy plus varying amounts of copper (sold under the designation Mumetal) for magnetic softness and improved ductility; and 85 wt. % Fe, 9 wt. % Si, 6 wt. % A1 (sold under the designation Sendust) for zero anisotropy.
  • the alloys included in category (1) are the most widely used of the three classes listed above because they combine zero magnetostriction with low anisotropy and are, therefore, extremely soft magnetically; that is they have a low coercivity, a high permeability and a low core loss. These permalloys are also relatively soft mechanically and their excellent magnetic properties, achieved by high temperature (above 1000°C) anneal, tend to be degraded by relatively mild mechanical shock.
  • Category (2) alloys such as those based on Co 90 Fe 10 have a much higher saturation induction (R s about 1.9 Tesla) than the permalloys. However, they also have a strong negative magnetocrystalline anisotropy, which prevents them from being good soft magnetic materials. For example, the initial permeability of Co 90 Fe 10 is only about 100 to 200.
  • Category (3) alloys such as Fe/6 wt% Si and the related ternary alloy Sendust (mentioned above) also show higher saturation inducations (B s about 1.8 Tesla and 1.1 Tesla, respectively) than the permalloys.
  • these alloys are extremely brittle and have, therefore, found limited use in powder form only.
  • compositional dependence of the magnetostriction is very strong in these materials, difficult precise tayloring of the alloy composition to achieve near-zero magnetostriction.
  • glassy metal alloys of zero magnetostriction. Such alloys might be found near the compositions listed above. Recause of the presence of metalloids which tend to quench the magnetization by the transfer of charge to the transition-metal d-electron states, however, glassy metal alloys based on the 80 nickel permalloys are either non-magnetic at room temperature or have unacceptably low saturation inductions.
  • the glassy alloy Fe 40 Ni 40 P 14 B 6 (the subscripts are in atom percent) has a saturation induction of about 0.8 Tesla, while the glassy alloy Ni 49 Fe 29 P 14 B 6 Si 2 has a saturation induction of about 0.46 Tesla and the glassy alloy Ni 80 P 20 is nonmagnetic.
  • No glassy metal alloys having a saturation magnetostriction approximately equal to zero have yet been found near the iron-rich Sendust composition.
  • a number of near-zero magnetostrictive glassy metal alloys based on the Co-Fe crystalline alloy mentioned above in (2) have been reported in the literature. These are, for example, Co 72 Fe 3 P 16 B 6 AL 3 (AIP Conference Proceedings, No. 24, pp. 745-746 (1975)) Co 70.5 Fe 4.5 Si 15 B 10 (Vol. 14, Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, pp. 1077-1078 (1975))
  • the saturation induction (B s ) of these alloys ranges between 0.6 and 1.2 Tesla.
  • the glassy .alloys with B s close to 0.6 T show low coercivities and high permeabilities comparable to crystalline supermalloys.
  • these alloys tend to be magnetically unstable at relatively low (150°C) temperatures.
  • the glassy alloys with B s ⁇ 1.2 Tesla tend to have their ferromagnetic Curie temperatures ( ⁇ f ) near or above their first crystallization temperatures (T cl ). This makes heat-treatment of these materials very difficult to achieve desired soft magnetic properties because such annealing is most effective when carried out at temperatures near ⁇ f .
  • a magnetic alloy that is at least 70% glassy, and which has a near-zero magnetostriction, high magnetic and thermal stability and excellent soft magnetic properties at high frequencies.
  • the glassy metal alloy has the composition CO a Fe b Ni c M d B e Si f , where subscripts are in atom percents and "a" ranges from about 65.5 to about 70.5, “h” ranges from about 3.8 to about 4.5, “c” ranges from about 0 to about 3, “d” ranges from about 1 to about 2, “e” ranges from about 10 to about 12 and “f” ranges from about 14 to about 15 when M is selected from a group consisting of vanadium, chromium, molybdenum, niobium and tungsten; when M is manganese, "a” ranges from about 68.0 to about 70.0, “b” ranges from about 2.5 to about 4.0, “c” ranges from about 0 to about 3, "d” ranges from about 1 to
  • the glassy alloy has a value of saturation magnetostriction ranging from about -1 x 10 -6 to + 1 x 10 -6 , a saturation induction ranging from about 0.65 to about 0.80 Tesla, a Curie temperature ranging from about 245 to about 310°C and the first crystallization temperature ranging from about 530 to 575°C.
  • a magnetic alloy that is at least 70% glassy and which has an outstanding combination of properties, including a near-zero magnetostriction, high magnetic and thermal stability and such soft magnetic properties as high permeability, low ac core loss and low coercivity.
  • the glassy metal alloy has the composition Co a Fe b Ni c M d B e Si f , where the subscripts are in atom percent and "a" ranges from about 65.5 to about 70.5, “b” ranges from about 3.8 to about 4.5, “c” ranges from about 0 to about 3, “d” ranges from about 1 and to about 2, “e” ranges from about 10 to about 12 and “f” ranges from about 14 to about 15 when M is selected from the group consisting of vanadium, chromium, molybdenum, niobium and tungsten; and when M is manganese, "a” ranges from about 68.0 to about 70.0, “b” ranges from about 2.5 to about 4.0, “c” ranges from about 0 to about 3, “d” ranges from about 1 to 4, “e” ranges from about 10 to about 12 and “f” ranges from about 14 to about 15.
  • the glassy alloy has a value of saturation magnetostriction ranging from about -1 x 10 -6 to about +1 x 10 -6 , a saturation induction ranging from about 0.65 to 0.80 Tesla, a Curie temperature ranging from about 245 to about 310°C and the first crystallization temperature ranging from about 530 to 575°C.
  • Examples of essentially zero magnetostrictive glassy metal alloys of the invention include.
  • the presence of the metal element M is to increase T cl and hence the thermal stability of the alloy system.
  • the glassy alloys of Table II exhibiting the saturation magnetostriction value ranging from -1 x 10 -6 to + 10 -6 may qualify.
  • the value of the magnetostriction is essentially determined by the ratio of Fe/(Co+Fe) or (Fe+Mn)/(Co+Fe+Mn). These ratios are about 0.06 and 0.07-0.09 respectively.
  • the small amount of the element Ni and the metal M excepting Mn which is present in the glassy alleys of the present invention is relatively ineffective to alter the magnetostriction of these alloys.
  • the glassy alloy of the invention are conveniently prepared by techniques readily available elsewhere; see, e.g., U.S. Patent 3,845,805, issued November 5, 1974 and 3,856,513, issued December 24, 1974.
  • the glassy alleys, in the form of continuous ribbon, wire, etc. are rapidly quenched from a melt of the desired composition at a rate of at least about 10 5 K/sec.
  • a metalloid content of boron and silicon in the range of about 24 to 27 atom percent of the total alloy composition is sufficient for glass formation, with boron ranging from about 10 to 12 atom percent and silicon ranging frcm about 14 to about 15 atom percent.
  • Tables III and IV give ac core loss (L) , exciting power (P 8 ) and permeabili ty ( ⁇ ) at 0.1 Tesla induction and at 50 kHz of the near-zero magnetostrictive glassy alloys of the present invention annealed at different temperature (T O ).
  • the advantageous combination of properties provided by the alloys of the present invention cannot be achieved in prior art nonmagnetostrictive glassy alloys with high saturation induction, such as Co 74 Fe 6 B 20 , because their Curie tetrperatures are higher than the first crystallization temperatures and the heat-treatment to improve their properties are not so effective as in those with lower saturation inductions.
  • the above properties, achieved in the glassy alleys of the present invention may be obtained in low induction glassy alloys of the prior art.
  • these alloys of the prior art such as Co 31.2 Fe 7 .8- Ni 39.0- R 14 Si 8 tend to be magnetically unstable at relatively low temperature of about 150°C as pointed out earlier.
  • Table V shows the magnetic properties of some of the representative glassy alloys of the composition Co a Fe b Ni c M d B e Si f (M is selected from the group consisting of V, Cr, Mn, Mo, Nb and W), in which at least one of a, b, c, d, e and f is outside the composition range defined in the present invention.
  • M is selected from the group consisting of V, Cr, Mn, Mo, Nb and W
  • the table indicates that the alloys with at least one of the constituents outside the defined ranges exhibit either Curie temperature or saturation induction too low to be practical in many magnetic applications
  • the ferromagnetic. Curie temperature ( ⁇ f ) was measured by inductance method and also monitored by differential scanning calorimetry, which was used primarily to determine the crystallization temperatures.
  • the first or primary crystallization temperature (T cl ) was used to compare the thermal stability of various glassy alloys of the present and prior art inventions.
  • Magnetic stability was determined from the reorientation kinetics of the magnetization, in accordance with the method described in Journal of Applied Physics, Vol. 49, p. 6510 (1978), which method is incorporated herein by reference thereto.

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Abstract

A glassy metal alloy has a value of magnetostriction near-zero and the composition CoaFebNicMdBeSif, where ''a'' ranges from about 65.5 to 70.5 atom percent, ''b'' ranges from about 3.8 to 4.5 atom percent, ''c'' ranges from about 0 to 3 atom percent, ''d'' ranges from about 1 to about 2 atom percent, ''e'' ranges from about 10 to about 12 atom percent and ''f'' ranges from about 14 to 15 atom percent when M is selected from vanadium, chromium, molybdenum, niobium and tungsten, when M is manganese, ''a'' ranges from about 68.0 to 70.0 atom percent, ''b'' ranges from about 2.5 to 4.0 atom percent, ''c'' ranges from 0 to 3 atom percent, ''d'' ranges from 1 to about 4 atom percent, ''e'' ranges from about 10 to 12 atom percent and ''f'' ranges from about 14 to about 15 atom percent. The alloy has a saturation magnetostriction value ranging from about -1x10-6 to +1x10-6, a saturation induction ranging from about 0.65 to about 0.80 Tesla and a Curie temperature ranging from about 245 to 310°C.

Description

NEAR-ZERO MAGNETOSTRICTIVE GLASSY METAL ALLOYS FOR HIGH FREQUENCY APPLICATIONS
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to glassy metal alloys with near-zero magnetostriction which are especially suited for use in high frequency applications.
2 . Description of the Prior Art
Saturation magnetostriction λs is related to the fractional change in length of Δℓ/ℓ that occurs in a magnetic material on going from the demagnetized to the saturated, ferromagnetic state. The value of magnetostriction, a dimensionless quantity, is often given in units of microstrains (i.e., a microstrain is a fractional change in length of one part per million). Ferromagnetic alloys of low magnetostriction are desirable for several interrelated reasons: 1. Soft magnetic properties (low coercivity, high permeability) are generally obtained when both the saturation magnetostriction λs and the magnetocrystalline anisotropy K approach zero.
Therefore, given the same anisotropy, alloys of lower magnetostriction will show lower dc coercivities and higher permeabilities. Such alloys are suitable for various soft magnetic applications.
2. Magnetic properties of such zero magnetostrictive materials are insensitive to mechanical strains. When this is the case, there is little need for stress-relief annealing after winding, punching or other physical handling needed to form a device from such material. In contrast, magnetic properties of stress-sensitive materials, such as the crystalline alloys, are seriously degraded by such cold working and such materials must be carefully annealed. 3. The low dc coercivity of zero magnetostrictive materials carries over to ac operating conditions where again low coercivity and high permeability are realized (provided the magneto-crystalline anisotropy is not too large and the resistivity not too small). Also because energy is not lost to mechanical vibrations when the saturation magnetostriction is zero, the core loss of zero magnetostrictive materials can be quite low. Thus, zero magnetostrictive magnetic alloys (of moderate or low magnetocrystalline anisotropy) are useful where low loss and high ac permeability are required. Such applications include a variety of tape-wound and laminated core devices, such as power transformers, signal transformers, magnetic recording heads and the like.
4. Finally, electromagnetic devices containing zero magnetostrictive materials generate no acoustic noise under AC excitation, while this is the reason for the lower core loss mentioned above, it is also a desirable characteristic in itself because it eliminates the hum inherent in many electromagnetic devices.
There are three well-known crystalline alloys of zero magnetostriction (in atom percent, unless otherwise indicated): (1) Nickel-iron alloys containing approximately 80% nickel ("80 nickel permalloys");
(2) Cobalt-iron alloys containing approximately 90% cobalt; and
(3) Iron-silicon alloys containing approximately 6 wt. % silicon.
Also included in these categories are zero magnetostrictive alloys based on the binaries but with small additions of other elements such as molybdenum, copper or aluminum to provide specific property changes. These include, for example, 4% Mo, 79% Ni, 17% Fe (sold under the designation Moly Permalloy) for increased resistivity and permeability; permalloy plus varying amounts of copper (sold under the designation Mumetal) for magnetic softness and improved ductility; and 85 wt. % Fe, 9 wt. % Si, 6 wt. % A1 (sold under the designation Sendust) for zero anisotropy.
The alloys included in category (1) are the most widely used of the three classes listed above because they combine zero magnetostriction with low anisotropy and are, therefore, extremely soft magnetically; that is they have a low coercivity, a high permeability and a low core loss. These permalloys are also relatively soft mechanically and their excellent magnetic properties, achieved by high temperature (above 1000°C) anneal, tend to be degraded by relatively mild mechanical shock.
Category (2) alloys such as those based on Co90Fe10 have a much higher saturation induction (Rs about 1.9 Tesla) than the permalloys. However, they also have a strong negative magnetocrystalline anisotropy, which prevents them from being good soft magnetic materials. For example, the initial permeability of Co90Fe10 is only about 100 to 200.
Category (3) alloys such as Fe/6 wt% Si and the related ternary alloy Sendust (mentioned above) also show higher saturation inducations (Bs about 1.8 Tesla and 1.1 Tesla, respectively) than the permalloys. However these alloys are extremely brittle and have, therefore, found limited use in powder form only. Recently both Fe/6.5 wt.% Si [IEEE Trans. MAG-16, 728 (1980)] and Sendust alloys [IEEE Trans. MAG-15, J149 (1970)] have been made relatively ductile by rapid solidification. However, compositional dependence of the magnetostriction is very strong in these materials, difficult precise tayloring of the alloy composition to achieve near-zero magnetostriction.
It is known that magnetocrystalline anisotropy is effectively eliminated in the glassy state. It is therefore desirable to seek glassy metal alloys of zero magnetostriction. Such alloys might be found near the compositions listed above. Recause of the presence of metalloids which tend to quench the magnetization by the transfer of charge to the transition-metal d-electron states, however, glassy metal alloys based on the 80 nickel permalloys are either non-magnetic at room temperature or have unacceptably low saturation inductions. For example, the glassy alloy Fe40Ni40P14B6 (the subscripts are in atom percent) has a saturation induction of about 0.8 Tesla, while the glassy alloy Ni49Fe29P14B6Si2 has a saturation induction of about 0.46 Tesla and the glassy alloy Ni80P20 is nonmagnetic. No glassy metal alloys having a saturation magnetostriction approximately equal to zero have yet been found near the iron-rich Sendust composition. A number of near-zero magnetostrictive glassy metal alloys based on the Co-Fe crystalline alloy mentioned above in (2) have been reported in the literature. These are, for example, Co72Fe3P16B6AL3 (AIP Conference Proceedings, No. 24, pp. 745-746 (1975)) Co70.5Fe4.5Si15B10 (Vol. 14, Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, pp. 1077-1078 (1975))
Co31.2Fe7.8Ni39.0B14SI8 [proceedings of 3rd International Conference on Rapidly Ouenched Metals, p. 183, (1979)] and Co74Fe6B20 [IEEE Trans. MAG-12, 942 (1976)1. Table I lists some of the magnetic properties of these materials.
Figure imgf000006_0001
Figure imgf000007_0001
The saturation induction (Bs) of these alloys ranges between 0.6 and 1.2 Tesla. The glassy .alloys with Bs close to 0.6 T show low coercivities and high permeabilities comparable to crystalline supermalloys. However, these alloys tend to be magnetically unstable at relatively low (150°C) temperatures. On the other hand, the glassy alloys with Bs ~ 1.2 Tesla tend to have their ferromagnetic Curie temperatures ( θf ) near or above their first crystallization temperatures (T cl). This makes heat-treatment of these materials very difficult to achieve desired soft magnetic properties because such annealing is most effective when carried out at temperatures near θf .
A recent prior art [Journal of Applied Physics 53, 7819 (1983)] discloses near-zero magnetostrictive glassy alloys with excellent soft magnetic properties and magnetic stability. These glassy alloys were designed with the idea of a saturation induction as high as possible. Recent trends in the applied magnetics do not necessarily require high saturation inductions but a high squareness ratio, a low ac core loss and a high permeability at high frequencies. In view of this, glassy metal alloys exhibiting these features are desirable. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with the invention, there is provided a magnetic alloy that is at least 70% glassy, and which has a near-zero magnetostriction, high magnetic and thermal stability and excellent soft magnetic properties at high frequencies. The glassy metal alloy has the composition COaFebNicMdBeSif, where subscripts are in atom percents and "a" ranges from about 65.5 to about 70.5, "h" ranges from about 3.8 to about 4.5, "c" ranges from about 0 to about 3, "d" ranges from about 1 to about 2, "e" ranges from about 10 to about 12 and "f" ranges from about 14 to about 15 when M is selected from a group consisting of vanadium, chromium, molybdenum, niobium and tungsten; when M is manganese, "a" ranges from about 68.0 to about 70.0, "b" ranges from about 2.5 to about 4.0, "c" ranges from about 0 to about 3, "d" ranges from about 1 to about 4, "e" ranges from about 10 to about 12 and "f" ranges from about 14 to about 15. The glassy alloy has a value of saturation magnetostriction ranging from about -1 x 10-6 to + 1 x 10-6, a saturation induction ranging from about 0.65 to about 0.80 Tesla, a Curie temperature ranging from about 245 to about 310°C and the first crystallization temperature ranging from about 530 to 575°C.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with the invention, there is provided a magnetic alloy that is at least 70% glassy and which has an outstanding combination of properties, including a near-zero magnetostriction, high magnetic and thermal stability and such soft magnetic properties as high permeability, low ac core loss and low coercivity. The glassy metal alloy has the composition CoaFebNicMdBeSif, where the subscripts are in atom percent and "a" ranges from about 65.5 to about 70.5, "b" ranges from about 3.8 to about 4.5, "c" ranges from about 0 to about 3, "d" ranges from about 1 and to about 2, "e" ranges from about 10 to about 12 and "f" ranges from about 14 to about 15 when M is selected from the group consisting of vanadium, chromium, molybdenum, niobium and tungsten; and when M is manganese, "a" ranges from about 68.0 to about 70.0, "b" ranges from about 2.5 to about 4.0, "c" ranges from about 0 to about 3, "d" ranges from about 1 to 4, "e" ranges from about 10 to about 12 and "f" ranges from about 14 to about 15. The glassy alloy has a value of saturation magnetostriction ranging from about -1 x 10-6 to about +1 x 10-6, a saturation induction ranging from about 0.65 to 0.80 Tesla, a Curie temperature ranging from about 245 to about 310°C and the first crystallization temperature ranging from about 530 to 575°C.
The purity of the above composition is that found in normal commercial practice. However, it will be appreciated that up to about 2 atom percent of (Si + B) may be replaced by carbon, aluminum or germanium without significantly degrading the desirable magnetic properties of these alloys.
Examples of essentially zero magnetostrictive glassy metal alloys of the invention include.
Co65.7Fe4.4Ni2.9Mo2B11Si14 and Co68.13pe4.0Ni1.37Mo1.5R10si15. These glassy alloys possess saturation induction between about 0.65 and 0.70 Tesla, Curie temperature of about 270°C and the first crystallization temperature of about 530°C. Some magnetic and thermal properties of other near-zero magnetostrictive glassy alloys of the present invention are listed in Table II.
Figure imgf000010_0001
The presence of the metal element M is to increase Tcl and hence the thermal stability of the alloy system. The content of M beyond 2 atom percent, however, reduces the Curie temperature to a level lower than 245°C, which is undesirable in conventional magnetic devices.
For sane applications, it may be desirable or acceptable to use a material with a small positive or a small negative magnetostriction, When this is the case, all of the glassy alloys of Table II exhibiting the saturation magnetostriction value ranging from -1 x 10-6 to + 10-6 may qualify. The value of the magnetostriction is essentially determined by the ratio of Fe/(Co+Fe) or (Fe+Mn)/(Co+Fe+Mn). These ratios are about 0.06 and 0.07-0.09 respectively. The small amount of the element Ni and the metal M excepting Mn which is present in the glassy alleys of the present invention is relatively ineffective to alter the magnetostriction of these alloys. The glassy alloy of the invention are conveniently prepared by techniques readily available elsewhere; see, e.g., U.S. Patent 3,845,805, issued November 5, 1974 and 3,856,513, issued December 24, 1974. In general, the glassy alleys, in the form of continuous ribbon, wire, etc., are rapidly quenched from a melt of the desired composition at a rate of at least about 105K/sec.
A metalloid content of boron and silicon in the range of about 24 to 27 atom percent of the total alloy composition is sufficient for glass formation, with boron ranging from about 10 to 12 atom percent and silicon ranging frcm about 14 to about 15 atom percent. Tables III and IV give ac core loss (L) , exciting power (P8 ) and permeabili ty ( μ ) at 0.1 Tesla induction and at 50 kHz of the near-zero magnetostrictive glassy alloys of the present invention annealed at different temperature (TO). Summarizing, by water quenching subsequent to the heat-treatments given in Table III, the glassy alloys of the present invention exhibit, on the average, L=4W/kg,P8=6VA/kg and μ =28,000. One of them, namely,
Co68.13Fe4.0Ni1.37Mo1.5B10si15, can attain L=3.0 W/kg,P8=4.2VA/kg and μ =38,000. Slσwsr cooling after the heat-treatments generally results in higher value for the loss and the exciting power, and lower permeabilities. Some of the glassy alloys of the present invention, when cooled slowly subsequent to the heat-treatments, however, show results comparable to or better than those exhibited by the materials quenched rapidly after the heat-treatments. One such example is shown by a glassy Co68 .75Fe4.25W2R10Si15, whicn gives L=2.7WAg, P8=4.6VA/kg and μ =34,100 at 50 kHz and 0.1 Tesla induction when heat-treated at 400°C for 15 min. without a field and cooled slowly at a rate of about -4°C/min. Compared with these values, a prior art crystalline non-magnetostrictive supermalloy of the similar thickness (25 μm ) gives L=BW/kg, P8=10VA/kg and μ = 19,000 at 0.1 Tesla and 50 kHz. Examples of glassy alloys outside the scope of the invention are set forth in Table v. The advantageous combination of properties provided by the alloys of the present invention cannot be achieved in prior art nonmagnetostrictive glassy alloys with high saturation induction, such as Co74Fe6B20, because their Curie tetrperatures are higher than the first crystallization temperatures and the heat-treatment to improve their properties are not so effective as in those with lower saturation inductions. The above properties, achieved in the glassy alleys of the present invention, may be obtained in low induction glassy alloys of the prior art. However, these alloys of the prior art such as Co31.2Fe7 .8-Ni39.0-R14Si8 tend to be magnetically unstable at relatively low temperature of about 150°C as pointed out earlier. The best combined properties of another glassy alloy of a prior art were L=4W/kg,Ps=7 VA/k g and μ =23,000 obtained for a glassy Co67.4Fe4.1Ni3.0Mo1.5-B12.5Si11.5 annealed at 380°C for 15 min. and cooled rapidly. It is again clear that the glassy alloys of the present invention are generally superior to this class of glassy alloys.
Figure imgf000013_0001
Figure imgf000014_0001
Table V shows the magnetic properties of some of the representative glassy alloys of the composition CoaFebNicMdBeSif (M is selected from the group consisting of V, Cr, Mn, Mo, Nb and W), in which at least one of a, b, c, d, e and f is outside the composition range defined in the present invention. The table indicates that the alloys with at least one of the constituents outside the defined ranges exhibit either Curie temperature or saturation induction too low to be practical in many magnetic applications
The following examples are presented to provide a more complete understanding of the invention. The specific techniques, conditions, materials, proportions and reported data set forth to illustrate the principles and practice of the invention are exemplary and should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention.
EXAMPLES
1. Sample Preparation The glassy alloys listed in Tables II-VII were rapidly quenched (about 106 K/sec) from the melt following the techniques taught by Chen and Polk in U.S Patent 3,856,513. The resulting ribbons, typically 25 to 30 μm thick and 0.5 to 2.5 cm wide, were determined to be free of significant crystallinity by x-ray diffractometry (using CuK radiation) and scanning calorimetry. Ribbons of the glassy metal alloys were strong, shiny, hard and ductile.
2. Magnetic Measurements Continuous ribbons of the glassy metal alloys prepared in accordance with the procedure described in Example I were wound onto bobbins (3.8 cm O.D.) to form closed-magnet-path toroidal samples. Each sample contained from 1 to 3 g of ribbon. Insulated primary and secondary windings (numbering at least 10 each) were applied to the toroids. These samples were used to obtain hysteresis loops (coercivity and remanence) and initial permeability with a commercial curve tracer and core loss (IEEE Standard 106-1972).
The saturation magnetization, Ms, of each sample, was measured with a commercial vibrating sample magnetometer (Princeton Applied Research). In this case, the ribbon was cut into several small squares (approximately 2 mm x 2 mm). These were randomly oriented about their normal direction, their plane being parallel to the applied field (0 to 720 kA/m. The saturation induction Bg (=4 π 4MsD) was then calculated by using the measured mass density D.
The ferromagnetic. Curie temperature ( θf ) was measured by inductance method and also monitored by differential scanning calorimetry, which was used primarily to determine the crystallization temperatures. The first or primary crystallization temperature (Tcl) was used to compare the thermal stability of various glassy alloys of the present and prior art inventions.
Magnetic stability was determined from the reorientation kinetics of the magnetization, in accordance with the method described in Journal of Applied Physics, Vol. 49, p. 6510 (1978), which method is incorporated herein by reference thereto.
Magnetostriction measurements employed metallic strain gauges (BLH Electronics), which were bonded (Eastman - 910 Cement) between two short lengths of ribbon. The ribbon axis and gauge axis were parallel. The magnetostriction was determined as a function of applied field from the longitudinal strain in the parallel ( Δℓ/ℓ ) and perpendicular ( Δℓ/ℓ) in-plain fields, according to the formula λ =2/3 [( Δℓ/ℓ) - Δℓ/ℓ)].
Having thus described the invention in rather full detail, it will be understood that this detail need not be strictly adhered to but that further changes and modifications may suggest themselves to one skilled in the art, all falling within the scope of the invention as defined by the subjoined claims.

Claims

What is claimed is:
1. A magnetic alloy that is at least 70% glassy, having the formula CoaFebNicMdBeSif where the subscripts are in atom percent and "a" ranges from about 65.5 to 70.5, "b" ranges from 3.8 to about 4.5, "c" ranges from about 0 to about 3, "d" ranges from about 1 to about 2, "e" ranges from about 10 to about 12 and "f" ranges from about 14 to about 15 when M is selected from the group consisting of vanadium, chromium, molybdenum, niobium and tungsten; when M is manganese, "a" ranges from about 68.0 to about 70.0, "b" ranges from about 2.5 to about 4.0, "c" ranges from about 0 to about 3, "d" ranges from about 1 to about 4, "e" ranges from about 10 to about 12 and "f" ranges from about 14 to about 15, said alloy having a value of the saturation magnetostriction between - 1x10-6 to +1x10-6.
2. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co65.7Fe4.4Ni2.9Mo2B11Si14.
3. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula CO68.13Fe4.0Ni1.37Mo1.5B10Si15.
4. The magnetic hlloy of claim 1 having the formula Co69. 6Fe4.4Mo1B10Si15.
5. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co68.75Fe4.25Mo2R10si15. 6. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co69.6Fe4.4Cr1B10Si15.
7. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co69.75Fe4.25Cr2R10si15.
8. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co68.2Pe3.8Mn1B12Si15.
9. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co67.7Fe3.3Mn2B12Si15.
10. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co70.0Fe4.0Mn1B10Si15. 11. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co69.5Fe3.5Mn2B10Si15.
12. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co69.0Fe3.0Mn3B10Si15.
13. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co68.5Fe2.5Mn4B10Si15.
14. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co69.6Fe4. 4V1B1 0Si15. 15. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co68.75Fe4.25V2R10Si15.
16. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co69.6Fe4.4Nb1B10Si15.
17. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co68.75Fe4.25Nb2B10Si15.
18. The magnetic alloy of claim 1 having the formula Co69.6Fe4.4W1B10Si15.
19. The magnetic alloy of claim 1. having the formula Co68.75Fe4.25W2B10Si15.
PCT/US1987/002802 1986-11-03 1987-10-27 Near-zero magnetostrictive glassy metal alloys for high frequency applications WO1988003699A1 (en)

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JP62507130A JPH0625399B2 (en) 1986-11-03 1987-10-27 Glassy alloy with almost zero magnetostriction for high frequency use

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EP0429022A2 (en) * 1989-11-17 1991-05-29 Hitachi Metals, Ltd. Magnetic alloy with ulrafine crystal grains and method of producing same
EP0762354A1 (en) * 1995-09-09 1997-03-12 Vacuumschmelze GmbH Elongated bodies as security label for electromagnetic theft security systems

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GB2264716B (en) * 1989-06-29 1994-02-23 Pitney Bowes Inc Cobalt-niobium amorphous ferromagnetic alloys
EP0429022A2 (en) * 1989-11-17 1991-05-29 Hitachi Metals, Ltd. Magnetic alloy with ulrafine crystal grains and method of producing same
EP0429022B1 (en) * 1989-11-17 1994-10-26 Hitachi Metals, Ltd. Magnetic alloy with ulrafine crystal grains and method of producing same
EP0762354A1 (en) * 1995-09-09 1997-03-12 Vacuumschmelze GmbH Elongated bodies as security label for electromagnetic theft security systems

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DE3775778D1 (en) 1992-02-13
EP0329704A1 (en) 1989-08-30
EP0329704B1 (en) 1992-01-02
JPH02500788A (en) 1990-03-15
JP2697808B2 (en) 1998-01-14
JPH0625399B2 (en) 1994-04-06

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