Structural and Magnetic Properties of Amorphous Alloys

A special issue of Metals (ISSN 2075-4701). This special issue belongs to the section "Entropic Alloys and Meta-Metals".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 May 2022) | Viewed by 494

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Faculty of Production Engineering and Materials Technology, Czestochowa University of Technology, Armii Krajowej 19 Av, 42-200 Czestochowa, Poland
Interests: methods of producing amorphous materials; bulk metallic glasses; amorphous materials; soft magnetic materials; nanomaterials; X-ray diffraction; Mössbauer spectroscopy; spectrophotometry; synthesis Carbon quantum dots
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

In recent years, various industries have been looking for new materials, the use of which would significantly affect indicators such as production costs, competitiveness, labor productivity, operation, ecology, innovation, and many others. Materials with amorphous and nanocrystalline structures are a very interesting, relatively new group of materials. Single-phase materials are the first of this group and are characterized by the presence of short-range interactions between atoms and the lack of periodicity in their spatial arrangement. The latter are two-phase materials consisting of an amorphous and a crystalline part. The mixture of these two phases may be the cause of a significant improvement in the functional properties of the tested alloy in relation to the properties of an amorphous or crystalline alloy of the same chemical composition.

Materials with an amorphous and nanocrystalline structure are one of the newer groups of functional materials with significantly better properties than the corresponding crystalline materials of the same composition. Particularly interesting for functional reasons are amorphous ferromagnetic alloys showing the so-called soft magnetic properties. These materials, compared to the commercially used FeSi transformer sheets, show significantly lower losses during re-magnetization, reducing this undesirable effect by as much as 80%. Therefore, in-depth knowledge of the methodology of their production and a detailed analysis of magnetic properties with the simultaneous study of their structure may contribute to significant technological progress.

This Special Issue covers all the aspects of the synthesis, characterization, and application of amorphous and nanocrystalline materials. I am inviting you to publish the results of your research related to the subject of this issue.

Dr. Pawel Pietrusiewicz
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • Amorphous and nanocrystalline materials
  • Soft magnetic materials
  • Rapid solidification
  • Injection and suction method casting
  • Melt spinning method
  • Structural relaxation

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