Ames Laboratory scientists create new lower cost magnetic alloy

April 29, 2015

News
April 29, 2015

Karl A Gschneidner and fellow scientists at the US Department of Energy’s Ames Laboratory, Iowa, USA, have created a new magnetic alloy that is an alternative to traditional rare-earth permanent magnets.

The new alloy, a potential replacement for high-performance permanent magnets found in automobile engines and wind turbines, eliminates the use of one of the scarcest and costliest rare earth elements, dysprosium, and instead uses cerium, the most abundant rare earth.

The result, an alloy of neodymium, iron and boron co-doped with cerium and cobalt, is a less expensive material with properties that are competitive with traditional sintered magnets containing dysprosium.

Experiments performed at Ames Laboratory by post-doctoral researcher Arjun Pathak and Mahmud Khan (now at Miami University) demonstrated that the cerium-containing alloy’s intrinsic coercivity – the ability of a magnetic material to resist demagnetisation – far exceeds that of dysprosium-containing magnets at high temperatures. The materials are at least 20 to 40% cheaper than the dysprosium-containing magnets.

“This is quite exciting result. We found that this material works better than anything out there at temperatures above 150° C,” stated Gschneidner. “It’s an important consideration for high-temperature applications.”

Previous attempts to use cerium in rare-earth magnets failed because it reduces the Curie temperature, the temperature above which an alloy loses its permanent magnet properties. The research team discovered, however, that co-doping with cobalt allowed them to substitute cerium for dysprosium without losing desired magnetic properties.

Finding a comparable substitute material is key to reducing manufacturing reliance on dysprosium as the current demand for it far outpaces mining and recycling sources for it.

The paper, “Cerium: An Unlikely Replacement of Dysprosium in High Performance Nd-Fe-B Permanent Magnets” was published in Advanced Materials, and co-authored by Arjun K. Pathak, Mahmud Khan, Karl. A. Gschneidner, Ralph W. McCallum, Lin Zhou, Kewei Sun, Kevin W. Dennis, Matthew J. Kramer and Vitalij Pecharsky of the Ames Laboratory; Chen Zhou of MEDA Engineering and Technical Services LLC; and Frederik E. Pinkerton of General Motors R&D Center.

The research was supported by the US Department of Energy’s ARPA-E REACT program (Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy–Rare Earth Alternatives in Critical Technologies) which develops cost-effective alternatives to rare earths, the naturally occurring minerals with unique magnetic properties that are used in electric vehicle (EV) motors and wind generators. The REACT projects identify low-cost and abundant replacement materials for rare earths while encouraging existing technologies to use them more efficiently.

www.ameslab.gov   

News
April 29, 2015

In our latest magazine…

Download PDF

Extensive metal powder and Powder Metallurgy news coverage, plus the following exclusive deep-dive articles and reports:

  • Soft Magnetic Composites (SMCs) for electric motors: A new era driven by automotive and aviation electrification
  • Keep your powder dry: The overlooked impact of moisture in metal powders
  • PM-HIP: The alternative to casting and forging that improves supply chain flexibility and sustainability
  • Producing copper powder from industrial waste: Destiny Copper’s sustainable recovery process
  • The 2024 Japan Powder Metallurgy Association Awards: Recognising innovations in PM

The latest news from the world of metal powders, delivered to your inbox

Don't miss any new issue of Metal Powder Technology, and get the latest industry news. Sign up to our weekly newsletter.

Sign up

Join 5,000+ other industry professionals – follow us online

Discover our magazine archive…

The free-to-access Metal Powder Technology magazine archive offers unparalleled insight into the world of metal powder from a commercial and technological perspective through:

  • Reports on visits to leading PM part manufacturers, metal powder manufacturers and industry suppliers
  • Articles on technology and application trends
  • Information on materials developments
  • Reviews of key technical presentations from the international conference circuit
  • International industry news

All past issues are available to download as free PDFs or view in your browser.

 

Browse the archive

 

Looking for PM production equipment, metal powders, R&D support and more?

Discover suppliers of these and more in our
advertisers’ index and buyer’s guide, available in the back of Metal Powder Technology magazine.

  • Powders & materials
  • Powder process, classification & analysis
  • PM products
  • Atomisers & powder production technology
  • Compaction presses, tooling & ancillaries
  • Sintering equipment & ancillaries
  • Post-processing
  • Consulting & toll sintering
View online
Share via
Copy link