Effects of Hydrostatic Pressure on the Properties of Magnetic Materials
- 1 May 1960
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 31 (5) , S239-S240
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1984680
Abstract
A review of the literature on hydrostatic pressure effects on magnetic materials showed a lack of information on technologically important properties such as initial permeability, and the hysteresis loop. Measurements of these properties up to 20000 psi showed that most solid materials are only slightly affected. These include tape cores of supermalloy, supermendur, 4–79 Mo-permalloy and grain-oriented Si-steel, as well as S-5 ferrite memory cores, and compressed powder cores of 2–81 Mo-permalloy or of carbonyl iron. Some types of NiZn and MnZn ferrite show increase of coercive force and decrease of permeability with pressure. Measurements were made of permeability vs frequency of MnZn ferrite to find the relaxation frequency. At atmospheric pressure, the permeability shows a sharp decline above 0.85 Mc. At 20000 psi the decline in permeability does not occur until 1.6 Mc.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of Hydrostatic Pressure and Temperature on the Magnetic Properties of a Nickel-Zinc FerriteJournal of Applied Physics, 1958
- The Change of Ferromagnetic Curie Points with Hydrostatic PressurePhysical Review B, 1954
- A Review of New Magnetic PhenomenaBell System Technical Journal, 1953