Magnetic behavior and chaining of strontium ferrite-nylon composite above the melting temperature

To better understand Magnetic Field Assisted Additive Manufacturing (MFAAM) the effect of a magnetic field on the orientation and distribution of magnetic particles in a molten magnetic composite was studied. Vibrating Sample Magnetometer (VSM) measurements were made on Sr-ferrite/PA12 fused deposit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tanjina N. Ahmed, Christopher Selsor, Jitendra S. Tate, Wilhelmus J. Geerts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing LLC 2023-02-01
Series:AIP Advances
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/9.0000596
Description
Summary:To better understand Magnetic Field Assisted Additive Manufacturing (MFAAM) the effect of a magnetic field on the orientation and distribution of magnetic particles in a molten magnetic composite was studied. Vibrating Sample Magnetometer (VSM) measurements were made on Sr-ferrite/PA12 fused deposition modeling filaments of different packing fraction (5 and 40 wt. %). The rotation of the sample’s magnetic moment upon application of a field perpendicular to the easy axis was monitored with a biaxial VSM above the PA12’s softening temperature. The observed magnetic moment transients depend on the temperature, the applied alignment field, the packing fraction, and the initial field-anneal procedure. Longer field-anneals result in larger time constants and seem to induce a hurdle that prevents complete alignment at low temperatures and/or for small fields. Results indicate the molten composite is a non-Newtonian fluid that can support a yielding stress. Scanning Electron microscopy (SEM) images taken on field-annealed samples at 230 °C show strong chaining with little PA-12 left between individual Sr-ferrite particles suggesting that direct particle to particle interaction is the reason for the observed non-zero yielding stress. The melt viscosity of the composite increases with the number of thermal cycles above the melting temperature (Tm). Room temperature (RT) torque magnetometry measurements show that magnetic anisotropy depends on the field annealing process through induced shape anisotropy contributions originating from magnetic particle agglomerates.
ISSN:2158-3226