News News
Contact us
  • Customer service number:64321087
  • Commercial service telephone:13918059423
  • Technical service telephone:13918059423
  • Contact person: Mr. Cui 
  • Service email:shxtb@163.com
  • Address: room 107, building 8, no. 100, guilin road, xuhui district, Shanghai

Scientists look to meteorites for inspiration to achieve critical element-free permanent magnet

The date of: 2020-12-11
viewed: 2

source:Newswise

The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Critical Materials Institute has developed a low-cost, high performance permanent magnet by drawing inspiration from an out-of-this-world source: iron-nickel alloys in meteorites. The magnet rivals widely used “Alnico” magnets in magnetic strength and has the potential to fill a strong demand for rare-earth- and cobalt-free magnets in the market.   

Here on earth, the strongest permanent magnets are ones containing the rare earth element neodymium – NdFeB magnets. Next strongest are Samarium-Cobalt, or SmCo magnets. Before rare-earth magnets were developed in the 1970s, the strongest magnets were made of aluminum-nickel-cobalt, or Alnico, which are still in wide use today in applications ranging from electric motors to consumer electronics.

The problem with these strong but earthly man-made permanent magnets is that they contain critical elements-- rare earths in the case of NdFeB and SmCo, and cobalt in the case of SmCo and Alnico-- ones that are in high demand for many technologies and for which manufacturers pay a premium for a sometimes unreliable supply.

“The iron-nickel magnetic alloys found in meteors are rare-earth and cobalt-free, but are highly ordered and take millions of years to produce through natural means,” said Vitalij Pecharsky, scientist at U.S. DOE’s Ames Laboratory and CMI. “Our team -- Oleksandr Dolotko, Ihor Hlova, Shalabh Gupta, and Anis Biswas – developed a method to produce the magnetic qualities of iron-nickel alloys that already perform on the level of Alnico, but in a much faster fashion.”

The method introduces a large number of defects into an iron and nickel alloy. It is then placed in reaction with ammonia, which results in a chemically ordered precursor iron-nickel-nitrogen, or FeNiN. The next step extracts the nitrogen from the material, without disturbing the order of the remaining iron and nickel.

Pecharsky said the ammonia process is scalable and reliably yields the precursor material at about 98 percent. The end product has energy density of 6 MG-Oe, which makes it comparable to Alnico magnets, and room for further improvements is substantial.

“There is a market demand for magnets that fill the gap in technical applications between the higher end, strongest rare-earth permanent magnets, and lower-strength options,” said Pecharsky. “We see this gaining wide adoption in that gap magnet space.”



Hot News / Related to recommend
  • 2025 - 01 - 21
    Click on the number of times: 0
    source:SMALL CAPSExploration company Marmota (ASX: MEU) is set to begin a maiden drilling campaign at the Muckanippie heavy minerals-titanium project in South Australia which yielded bonanza assays in...
  • 2025 - 01 - 21
    Click on the number of times: 0
    Sex disparities in the association between rare earth elements exposure and genetic mutation frequencies in lung cancer patients source:Scientific ReportsThe ubiquitous use of rare earth elements...
  • 2025 - 01 - 17
    Click on the number of times: 0
    source:Phys.orgAn international team of chemists has successfully created methylenedistibiranes, which are three-membered rings that have two antimony atoms and one carbon atom. In their paper publish...
  • 2025 - 01 - 15
    Click on the number of times: 0
    Marmota reports bonanza heavy mineral assays from metallurgical testing at Muckanippie titanium discovery source:SMALL CAPSFirst assays from metallurgical testwork at Marmota’s (ASX: MEU) Muckani...
  • Copyright ©Copyright 2018 2020 Shanghai rare earth association All Rights Reserved Shanghai ICP NO.2020034223
    the host:Shanghai Association of Rare Earth the guide:Shanghai Development and Application Office of Rare Earth the organizer:Shanghai rare earth industry promotion center
    犀牛云提供云计算服务