[Paper] “Thermal Activation in Permanent Magnets” published in JOM

This week our new paper titled “Thermal Activation in Permanent Magnets” has been published in JOM (Springer). The invited paper is under a special topic, “Permanent Magnets beyond Nd-Dy-Fe-B”. An author manuscript (reprint) is available here. Fig 1: Explanation of method for calculating the thermally activated coercivity of using micromagnetics. In the paper we provide a more detailed overview of the micromagnetic methods we have developed to model the thermal activation of permanent magnets. These methods allow us to simulate and understand the behaviour of permanent magnets at finite temperatures, which is important since the generators in wind turbines and electric motors in green cars operate at higher temperatures. For example, in electric cars the typical operation temperature of the motors can be around 450ºK (177º C). ...

April 24, 2015 · 2 min · Simon

New paper; Thermally-activated coercivity in core-shell permanent magnets

Our new paper titled “Thermally-activated coercivity in core-shell permanent magnets” has been accepted for publication in Journal of Applied Physics. Click here to download the paper as a PDF file. In the paper we describe recent micromagnetics simulations on NdFeB grains that have undergone a dysprosium (Dy) grain boundary diffusion process (GBDP). The super hard (Dy,Nd)FeB shell that is formed during this process stabilizes the grains against thermal fluctuations that can be detrimental to the coercivity of the magnet in high-temperature situations. NdFeB permanent magnets are usually doped with Dy to increase their performance at high temperatures but the GBDP allows us to target the Dy at the most important locations i.e. the grain surface, thus reducing the overall required amount of Dy, which is expensive and in short supply. ...

October 23, 2014 · 2 min · Simon