Permanent Magnet Materials
Basic Technical Questions
What is a Permanent Magnet?
A permanent magnet is a material that continues to emit a magnetic field after the applied magnetising field has been removed. Also known as “hard” magnets, unlike the “soft” magnets produced by other companies within the MMG/TT electronics group. In this case “hard” or “soft” refer to the magnetic properties not their physical condition.
What types of material are there?
There are a great many different materials. These are the main commercial materials in order of power or strength:
ALNICO
ALuminium NIckel and CObalt alloys.
Medium cost
Ferrite Usually Strontium Ferrite but could be Barium Ferrite Lowest cost
Samarium Cobalt (SmCo)
A first generation rare earth magnet Tends to be expensive
Neodymium-Iron-Boron (Neo or NdFeB)
A second-generation rare earth magnet Between Alnico and SmCo in cost
What is meant by Anisotropic and Isotropic magnets?
Anisotropic magnets have a magnetic axis determined at the pressing stage of manufacture. Once this has been carried out the axis cannot be changed. Isotropic magnets have no preferred axis and can be magnetised in any direction. (Isotropic magnets will always exhibit lower magnetic performance when compared to Anisotropic).
How is a Magnet’s Magnetic Performance Measured?
1) Flux or Gaussmeter
Using a Hall effect probe - a measurement of magnetic flux density in a given position. Suppliers or users do not usually quote this.
2) Demagnetisation Curve
This is the absolute performance of any magnetic material and will be found in all manufacturers data or in the MMPA or DIN standards.
The Main points are:
1) Remanence (Br)
This is measured in Gauss or Tesla – In this case 12kG
2) Coercivity (bHc – Normal Coercivity, jHc – Intrinsic Coercivity)
This is measured in Oersteds or kA/m2
In this case: bHc = 10.8 kOe
jHc = 14 kOe
Normal coercivity is the applied field required to reduce the external field generated by the magnet to zero.
Intrinsic coercivity is the applied field required to fully demagnetise the material.
3) BHmax – Maximum energy stored within the magnet
This is measured in MGOe or kJ/m³
In this case 33MGO
A simple way to remember the Demag curve points
Think of it as a ski slope!
The top of the hill is Remanence (Br)
The bottom of the hill is Coercivity (bHc or jHc)
Where the sharp drop starts is the BHmax.
Some Material Comparisons
MATERIAL Br
kG BHc
kOe jHc
kOe BHmax
MGOe COMMENTS
ALNICO 5 12.6 0.65
0.63
5.4
FERRITE C8 3.7 3.0 3.25 3.3
SmCo 2:17
10.3 7.5 12.0 24 7 times stronger than Ferrite C8
NdFeB N35 12.1 11.4 12.0 35 Over 10 times stronger than Ferrite C8