Journal of Central South University, Volume 27, Issue 8, Pages 2220-2226 , 01/08/2020

Phase investigations of manganese-bismuth alloyed in a microwave furnace

Panita Thongjumpa, Thanida Charoensuk, Upsorn Boonyang, Phimphaka Harding, Chitnarong Sirisathitkul

Abstract

Implementation of manganese-bismuth (MnBi) alloys as high-performance permanent magnets is a challenge for physicists and engineers because the ferromagnetic low-temperature phase (LTP) is not exclusively obtained. In this work, melting powered by four commercial magnetrons of 2000–2500 W in a microwave furnace is demonstrated as a new route to alloy MnBi. Under an argon atmosphere, microwave heating transferred to pieces of broken Bi ingots and Mn flakes for 2 h gave rise to products of inhomogeneous composition and morphology. Scanning electron micrographs were classified into three regions according to morphology and elemental composition. Cubic-like clusters characterized as Mn precipitated over light solidified Bi-rich regions, and the MnBi phase was formed in homogeneous regions with a balanced composition between Mn and Bi. A ferromagnetic hysteresis loop was obtained in the ground powder with a coercivity of 40 kA/m. Subsequent annealing at 553 K under a pressure of 414 kPa for 12 h enhanced the MnBi phase with extended regions of balanced composition. It follows that the coercivity was increased to 60 kA/m. However, remanent magnetization was slightly reduced. This MnBi alloyed by microwave radiation can be further used in rare-earth-free magnets.

Document Type

Article

Source Type

Journal

Keywords

bismuthcoercivitymagnetic propertiesmanganesemicrowavescanning electron microscopy

ASJC Subject Area

Engineering : Engineering (all)Materials Science : Metals and Alloys

Funding Agency

Thailand Center of Excellence in Physics



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Citations (Scopus)

Bibliography


Thongjumpa, P., Charoensuk, T., Boonyang, U., Harding, P., & Sirisathitkul, C. (2020). Phase investigations of manganese-bismuth alloyed in a microwave furnace. Journal of Central South University, 27(8) 2220-2226. doi:10.1007/s11771-020-4443-6

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