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Magnetoelectric Tuning of Pinning‐Type Permanent Magnets through Atomic‐Scale Engineering of Grain Boundaries

Xinglong Ye, Fengkai Yan, Lukas Schäfer, Di Wang, Holger Geßwein, Wu Wang, Mohammed Reda Chellali, Leigh T. Stephenson, Konstantin Skokov, Oliver Gutfleisch, Dierk Raabe, Horst Hahn, Baptiste Gault, Robert Kruk

2020Advanced Materials34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

-based magnets are excellent candidates owing to their high-temperature stability. However, despite intensive efforts to optimize the intragranular microstructure, the coercivity currently only reaches 20-30% of the theoretical limits. Here, the roles of the grain-interior nanostructure and the grain boundaries in controlling coercivity are disentangled by an emerging magnetoelectric approach. Through hydrogen charging/discharging by applying voltages of only ≈1 V, the coercivity is reversibly tuned by an unprecedented value of ≈1.3 T. In situ magneto-structural characterization and atomic-scale tracking of hydrogen atoms reveal that the segregation of hydrogen atoms at the grain boundaries, rather than the change of the crystal structure, dominates the reversible and substantial change of coercivity. Hydrogen reduces the local magnetocrystalline anisotropy and facilitates the magnetization reversal starting from the grain boundaries. This study opens a way to achieve the giant magnetoelectric effect in permanent magnets by engineering grain boundaries with hydrogen atoms. Furthermore, it reveals the so far neglected critical role of grain boundaries in the conventional magnetization-switching paradigm of pinning-type magnets, suggesting a critical reconsideration of engineering strategies to overcome the coercivity limits.

Topics & Concepts

CoercivityMaterials scienceGrain boundaryMagnetocrystalline anisotropyMagnetCondensed matter physicsMagnetizationGrain growthGrain sizeMagnetic anisotropyMicrostructureMetallurgyMagnetic fieldMechanical engineeringPhysicsQuantum mechanicsEngineeringMagnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materialsMagnetic Properties of AlloysMagnetic properties of thin films