- magnetic ceramics
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Introductionoxide materials that exhibit a certain type of permanent magnetization called ferrimagnetism. Commercially prepared magnetic ceramics are used in a variety of permanent magnet, transformer, telecommunications, and information recording applications. This article describes the composition and properties of the principal magnetic ceramic materials and surveys their main commercial applications.Ferrites: (ferrite) composition, structure, and propertiesMagnetic ceramics are made of ferrites, which are crystalline minerals composed of iron oxide in combination with some other metal. They are given the general chemical formula M(FexOy), M representing other metallic elements than iron. The most familiar ferrite is magnetite, a naturally occurring ferrous ferrite (Fe[Fe2O4], or Fe3O4) commonly known as lodestone. The magnetic properties of magnetite have been exploited in compasses since ancient times.The magnetic behaviour exhibited by the ferrites is called ferrimagnetism; (ferrimagnetism) it is quite different from the magnetization (called ferromagnetism) that is exhibited by metallic materials such as iron. In ferromagnetism there is only one kind of lattice site, and unpaired electron “spins” (the motions of electrons that cause a magnetic field) line up in one direction within a given domain. In ferrimagnetism, on the other hand, there is more than one kind of lattice site, and electron spins align so as to oppose one another—some being “spin-up” and some being “spin-down”—within a given domain. Incomplete cancellation of opposing spins leads to a net polarization, which, though somewhat weaker than for ferromagnetic materials, can be quite strong.Three basic classes of ferrites are made into magnetic ceramic products. Based upon their crystal structure, they are the spinels (spinel), the hexagonal ferrites, and the garnets.SpinelsSpinels have the formula M(Fe2O4), where M is usually a divalent cation such as manganese (Mn2+), nickel (Ni2+), cobalt (Co2+), zinc (Zn2+), copper (Cu2+), or magnesium (Mg2+). M can also represent the monovalent lithium cation (Li+) or even vacancies, as long as these absences of positive charge are compensated for by additional trivalent iron cations (Fe3+). The oxygen anions (O2−) adopt a close-packed cubic crystal structure, and the metal cations occupy the interstices in an unusual two-lattice arrangement. In each unit cell, containing 32 oxygen anions, 8 cations are coordinated by 4 oxygens (tetrahedral sites), and 16 cations are coordinated by 6 oxygens (octahedral sites). The antiparallel alignment and incomplete cancellation of magnetic spins between the two sublattices leads to a permanent magnetic moment. Because spinels are cubic in structure, with no preferred direction of magnetization, they are “soft” magnetically; i.e., it is relatively easy to change the direction of magnetization through the application of an external magnetic field.Hexagonal ferritesThe so-called hexagonal ferrites have the formula M(Fe12O19), where M is usually barium (Ba), strontium (Sr), or lead (Pb). The crystal structure is complex, but it can be described as hexagonal with a unique c axis, or vertical axis. This is the easy axis of magnetization in the basic structure. Because the direction of magnetization cannot be changed easily to another axis, hexagonal ferrites are referred to as “hard.”garnet ferritesGarnet ferrites have the structure of the silicate mineral garnet and the chemical formula M3(Fe5O12), where M is yttrium or a rare-earth ion. In addition to tetrahedral and octahedral sites, such as those seen in spinels, garnets have dodecahedral (12-coordinated) sites. The net ferrimagnetism is thus a complex result of antiparallel spin alignment among the three types of sites. Garnets are also magnetically hard.Processing of ceramic ferritesCeramic ferrites are made by traditional mixing, calcining, pressing, firing, and finishing steps. Control of cation composition and gas atmosphere is essential. For example, the saturation magnetization of spinel ferrites can be greatly enhanced by partial substitution of Zn(Fe2O4) for Ni(Fe2O4) or Mn(Fe2O4). The zinc cations prefer tetrahedral coordination and force additional Fe3+ onto the octahedral sites. This results in less cancellation of spins and greater saturation magnetization.Advanced processing also is used for ferrite manufacture, including coprecipitation, freeze-drying, spray roasting, and sol-gel processing. (These methods are described in the article advanced ceramics.) In addition, single crystals are grown by pulling from fluxed melts (the Czochralski method) or by gradient cooling of melts (the Bridgman method). Ferrites also can be deposited as thin films on suitable substrates by chemical vapour deposition (CVD), liquid-phase epitaxy (LPE), and sputtering. (These methods are described in crystal: Crystal growth: Growth from the melt (crystal).)ApplicationsPermanent magnetsHard magnetic ferrites are used as permanent magnets and in refrigerator seal gaskets. They also are used in microphones and speaker gaskets. The largest market for permanent magnets is in small motors for cordless appliances and in automobile applications.Electric circuits (electric circuit)Although ceramic ferrites have smaller saturation magnetizations than magnetic metals, they can be made much more resistive to electric currents. In soft ferrites this is accomplished by oxidizing the grain boundaries during processing to yield resistive internal layers. Greater resistivity reduces the occurrence of eddy currents, which are caused by rapidly fluctuating magnetic fields and result in the loss of signal energy to heat. As a consequence of their reduction of eddy currents, soft ceramic ferrites are employed in telecommunications and transformers, especially at higher frequencies.One of the earliest uses of ceramic ferrites was as a channel filter in telephony, although solid-state filters and fibre optics are making this application obsolete. Ferrites are used in the tone-generating circuitry of push-button telephones and as load coils in transmission lines to reduce signal loss over long distances. A major application is as deflection yokes and fly-back transformers for control of electron-beam rastering in television sets. Ferrites also are used extensively as input and output filters, switching regulators, and high-frequency power transformers in electric power systems.Magnetic storageThe earliest nonvolatile memory for computers (computer memory) consisted of tiny wire-threaded ferrite torroids; their two stable states of remanence were able to represent the “1” and “0” of binary logic. This application has long since been taken over by semiconductor memory devices, but ferrites still dominate external memory storage on devices such as tape, floppy disks, and hard disks. In place of torroids, very small regions of acicular (needlelike) particles adhering to the tape or disk can be magnetized by a field in the gap of a recording head. (The head is also often made from ferrite material.) Ferrite tape media, typically gamma-ferrite (γ-Fe2O3), is used for analog audio and video recording.Computer bubble memory has been developed based on magnetic garnet ferrites. In bubble memory small, cylindrically reversed magnetic domains can be generated, moved, and stored in specified locations to be read at a later time. The presence or absence of a bubble corresponds to the two binary logic states.Microwave and radarAt microwave frequencies (from 1 to 300 gigahertz) ferrites offer gyromagnetic properties; i.e., they can rotate and direct microwave energy in devices called circulators. Radar-absorbing paint made from ferrites can be used to coat military aircraft for stealth operations.Magnetic ceramics are only one of several types of electroceramics. For a survey of all advanced electromagnetic applications, see electroceramics. For a directory to all the articles covering both traditional and advanced ceramics, see Industrial Ceramics: Outline of Coverage—.Additional ReadingMaterials on magnetic ceramics may be found in A.J. Moulson and J.M. Herbert, Electroceramics: Materials, Properties, Applications (1990); Larry L. Hench and J.K. West, Principles of Electronic Ceramics (1990); and the section titled “Electrical/Electronic Applications for Advanced Ceramics,” in Theodore J. Reinhart (ed.), Engineered Materials Handbook, vol. 4, Ceramics and Glasses, ed. by Samuel J. Schneider (1991), pp. 1105–66.A good introduction to ceramics in general is provided by David W. Richerson, Modern Ceramic Engineering: Properties, Processing, and Use in Design, 2nd ed., rev. and expanded (1992). The processing of both traditional and advanced ceramics is described in James S. Reed, Introduction to the Principles of Ceramic Processing (1988); I.J. McColm and N.J. Clark, Forming, Shaping, and Working of High Performance Ceramics (1988); George Y. Onoda, Jr., and Larry L. Hench, Ceramic Processing Before Firing (1978); and four sections of the Reinhart book cited above: “Ceramic Powders and Processing,” pp. 41–122; “Forming and Predensification, and Nontraditional Densification Processes,” pp. 123–241; “Firing/Sintering: Densification,” pp. 242–312; and “Final Shaping and Surface Finishing,” pp. 313–376.Thomas O. Mason
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