Enhancing Intrinsic Magnetic Hardness by Modulating Antagonistic Interactions in the Rare-Earth-Free Magnetic Solid Solution Hf2 Fe1-δ Ru5-x Irx+δ B2

Chemistry. 2024 Mar 1;30(13):e202303381. doi: 10.1002/chem.202303381. Epub 2024 Jan 15.

Abstract

The quinary members in the solid solution Hf2 Fe1-δ Ru5-x Irx+δ B2 (x=1-4, VE=63-66) have been investigated experimentally and computationally. They were synthesized via arc-melting and analyzed by EDX and X-ray diffraction. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations predicted a preference for magnetic ordering in all members, but with a strong competition between ferro- and antiferromagnetism arising from interchain Fe-Fe interactions. The spin exchange and magnetic anisotropy energies predicted the lowest magnetic hardness for x=1 and 3 and the highest for x=2. Magnetization measurements confirm the DFT predictions and demonstrate that the antiferromagnetic ordering (TN =55-70 K) found at low magnetic fields changed to ferromagnetic (TC =150-750 K) at higher fields, suggesting metamagnetic behavior for all samples. As predicted, Hf2 FeRu3 Ir2 B2 has the highest intrinsic coercivity (Hc =74 kA/m) reported to date for Ti3 Co5 B2 -type phases. Furthermore, all coercivities outperform that of ferromagnetic Hf2 FeIr5 B2 , indicating the importance of AFM interactions in enhancing magnetic anisotropy in these materials. Importantly, two members (x=1 and 4) maintain intrinsic coercivities in the semi-hard range at room temperature. This study opens an avenue for controlling magnetic hardness by modulating antagonistic AFM and FM interactions in low-dimensional rare-earth-free magnetic materials.

Keywords: DFT; Ti3Co5B2-type structure; borides; metamagnetism; permanent magnets.