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Crystal structure and microwave permeability of very thin Fe–Si–Al flakes produced by microforging
77
Citations
3
References
2003
Year
Crystal StructureMagnetic PropertiesEngineeringMaterial InnovationMagnetic MaterialsMagnetismMaterials SciencePhysicsCrystalline DefectsNanotechnologyDispersion D IiiMicrowave CeramicMagnetoelasticityMagnetic MaterialMicrowave SynthesisMicrostructureFerromagnetismMicrofabricationNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsThin Fe–si–al FlakesPeculiar Dual-peak DispersionMagnetic PropertyFunctional MaterialsDual Dispersion
Fine flakes of Fe–Si–Al produced by long-duration microforging exhibit a peculiar dual-peak dispersion in their frequency characteristics of the imaginary part of the permeability. This dual dispersion has a high potential to be a electromagnetic noise suppressor, works effectively in the microwave band. In a previous report we clarified that one of the dispersions (D II), which appears in the lower frequency range, is correlated to a shape anisotropy of the flakes. In this article, the origin of another dispersion (D III) is studied by analyses of crystalline structure changes during forging (100–180 h) and annealing processes. X-ray diffraction and Mössbauer spectra strongly suggest that the annealed flakes have a composition gradient structure consisting of an Fe-rich mother phase and a Si/Al-rich surface layer. The fact that dispersion D III is enhanced with development of this phase separation leads to the conclusion that dispersion D III is caused by a magnetoelastic anisotropy near the flake surface.
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