2006
DOI: 10.1063/1.2188385
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Influence of Co addition on the magnetocaloric effect of FeCoSiAlGaPCB amorphous alloys

Abstract: The FeCoSiAlGaPCB alloys can be prepared as bulk amorphous materials, with outstanding mechanical properties and increased electrical resistivity. These features can be beneficial for their application as a magnetic refrigerant. The influence of Co addition on the magnetic entropy change of the alloy has been studied. This compositional modification displaces the temperature of the peak entropy change closer to room temperature, but reduces the refrigerant capacity of the material. For the Co-free alloy, the p… Show more

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Cited by 90 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…5 shows the thermal dependence of n for the different studied alloys. In agreement with previous experimental data, [15][16][17][18][19] the general behavior consists in ͑a͒ a value of n close to 1 for temperatures well below the transition temperature ͑b͒ a smooth decrease of n down to values close to 0.75 at T pk , and ͑c͒ a subsequent increase to n =2 in the paramagnetic region. These values have been ascribed 23 to ͑a͒ the temperature independent magnetization for moderate magnetic fields at low temperatures, ͑b͒ a relationship between n and the two critical exponents controlling the field dependence of magnetization at the Curie temperature ͑␦͒ and the thermal dependence of magnetization ͑␤͒, of the form n =1+͑1/␦͒͑1−1/␤͒, and ͑c͒ a consequence of the linear field dependence of magnetization where the Curie-Weiss law is valid, respectively.…”
Section: B Field Dependence Of Mcesupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…5 shows the thermal dependence of n for the different studied alloys. In agreement with previous experimental data, [15][16][17][18][19] the general behavior consists in ͑a͒ a value of n close to 1 for temperatures well below the transition temperature ͑b͒ a smooth decrease of n down to values close to 0.75 at T pk , and ͑c͒ a subsequent increase to n =2 in the paramagnetic region. These values have been ascribed 23 to ͑a͒ the temperature independent magnetization for moderate magnetic fields at low temperatures, ͑b͒ a relationship between n and the two critical exponents controlling the field dependence of magnetization at the Curie temperature ͑␦͒ and the thermal dependence of magnetization ͑␤͒, of the form n =1+͑1/␦͒͑1−1/␤͒, and ͑c͒ a consequence of the linear field dependence of magnetization where the Curie-Weiss law is valid, respectively.…”
Section: B Field Dependence Of Mcesupporting
confidence: 77%
“…For example, the addition of Co in alloys with high metalloid content produces a decrease of the Curie temperature of the material, making it closer to room temperature, but at the expense of a reduction in both its ͉⌬S M pk ͉ and its refrigerant capacity ͑RC͒. 18 A similar effect has been observed for Cr and/or Mo substitution in bulk amorphous alloys. 19 Therefore, the application of hightemperature magnetic refrigerants would require the search for alloying elements which would optimize the Curie temperature of the material without a detrimental effect on the MCE response.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 59%
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“…In particular, there is a growing interest in studying the applicability of soft magnetic amorphous alloys as magnetic refrigerants [9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20] due to their reduced magnetic hysteresis ͑vir-tually negligible͒, higher electrical resistivity ͑which would decrease eddy current losses͒, and tunable Curie temperature T Curie . Among the different compositional series of soft magnetic amorphous alloys, Nanoperm-type alloys are those that currently exhibit the highest RC values, having also among the highest values of ͉⌬S M pk ͉.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…8 More recently, soft magnetic amorphous alloys are getting increasing attention as low-cost candidates for magnetic refrigeration. [9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18] ͑According to a well-known bibliographic database, more than 36% of the literature on the magnetocaloric effect in amorphous materials were published since 2005. Considering only the magnetocaloric effect in transition-metal-based amorphous alloys, more than 50% of the papers studying these materials were published since then.͒ Although the maximum magnetic entropy change, ͉⌬S M pk ͉, for these alloys is modest when compared to that of rare-earth-based materials, 1,6 the remarkable difference in material costs is an incentive for studying their suitability as magnetic refrigerants.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%