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Preparation and Physical Properties of Quaternary Mn 2 FeSi 0.5 Al 0.5 Alloy Powders with Heusler and β-Mn Structures.

Authors :
Skotnicova, Katerina
Jurica, Jan
Zivotsky, Ondrej
Cegan, Tomas
Hrabovska, Kamila
Matejka, Vlastimil
Zla, Simona
Kawulokova, Monika
Chrobak, Artur
Source :
Materials (1996-1944); Jan2025, Vol. 18 Issue 2, p309, 15p
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

Manganese-based alloys with the composition Mn<subscript>2</subscript>FeZ (Z = Si, Al) have been extensively investigated in recent years due to their potential applications in spintronics. The Mn<subscript>2</subscript>FeSi alloy, prepared in the form of ingots, powders, or ribbons, exhibits either a cubic full-Heusler (L2<subscript>1</subscript>) structure, an inverse-Heusler (XA) structure, or a combination of both. In contrast, the Mn<subscript>2</subscript>FeAl alloy has so far been synthesized only in the form of ingots, featuring a primitive cubic (β-Mn type) structure. This study focuses on the new quaternary Mn<subscript>2</subscript>FeSi<subscript>0.5</subscript>Al<subscript>0.5</subscript> alloy synthesized from pure Mn, Fe, Si, and Al powders via mechanical alloying. The elemental powders were ball-milled for 168 h with a ball-to-powder ratio of 10:1, followed by annealing at 550 °C, 700 °C, and 950 °C for 8 h in an argon protective atmosphere. The results demonstrate that annealing at lower temperatures (550 °C) led to the formation of a Heusler structure with a lattice constant of 0.5739 nm. Annealing at 700 °C resulted in the coexistence of several phases, including the Heusler phase and a newly developed primitive cubic β-Mn structure. Further increasing the annealing temperature to 950 °C completely suppressed the Heusler phase, with the β-Mn structure, having a lattice constant of 0.6281 nm, becoming the dominant phase. These findings confirm the possibility of tuning the structure of Mn<subscript>2</subscript>FeSi<subscript>0.5</subscript>Al<subscript>0.5</subscript> alloy powder—and thereby its physical properties—by varying the annealing temperature. The sensitivity of magnetic properties to structural changes is demonstrated through magnetization curves and zero-field-cooled/field-cooled curves in the temperature range of 5 K to 300 K. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19961944
Volume :
18
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Materials (1996-1944)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
182445703
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18020309