Effect of high-energy ball-milling on the magnetostructural properties of a Ni45Co5Mn35Sn15 alloy
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Date
2020-12-23Author
López García, Javier
Sánchez Alarcos, Vicente
Recarte Callado, Vicente
Rodríguez Velamazán, José Alberto
García Martínez, José Ángel
La Roca, Paulo Matías
Pérez de Landazábal, José Ignacio
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Journal of Alloys and Compounds 858 : (2021) // Article ID 158350
Abstract
[EN] The effect of high-energy ball-milling on the magnetostructural properties of a Ni45Co5Mn35Sn15 alloy in austenitic phase at room temperature has been analyzed by neutron and high-resolution X-ray diffraction. The ball milling promotes a mechanically-induced martensitic transformation as well as the appearance of amorphous-like non-transforming regions, following a double stage; for short milling times (below 30 min), a strong size reduction and martensite induction occur. On the opposite, for longer times, the increase of strains predominates and consequently a larger amount of non-transforming regions appears. The effect of the microstructural defects brought by milling (as dislocations) on both the enthalpy change at the martensitic transformation and the high field magnetization of the austenite has been quantitatively estimated and correlated to the internal strains. Contrary to what occurs in ternary Ni-Mn-Sn alloys, the mechanically induced defects do not change the ferromagnetic coupling between Mn atoms, but just cause a net reduction on the magnetic moments.