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K. B. Hathaway

Bio: K. B. Hathaway is an academic researcher from United States Department of the Navy. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetostriction & Tetragonal crystal system. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 15 publications receiving 795 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a single maximum in the magnetoelastic coupling |b1| of Fe with increasing amounts of nonmagnetic Ga, combined with a strongly temperature dependent elastic shear modulus (c11−c12) is interpreted as anomalous magnetostrictive behavior in Fe-Ga alloys.
Abstract: Extraordinary magnetostrictive behavior has been observed in Fe-Ga alloys with concentrations of Ga between 4% and 27%. λ100 exhibits two peaks as a function of Ga content. At room temperature, λ100 reaches a maximum of 265 ppm near 19% Ga and 235 ppm near 27% Ga. For compositions between 19% and 27%, λ100 drops sharply to a minimum near 24% Ga and exhibits an anomalous temperature dependence, decreasing by as much as a factor of 2 at low temperatures. This unusual magnetostrictive behavior is interpreted on the basis of a single maximum in the magnetoelastic coupling |b1| of Fe with increasing amounts of nonmagnetic Ga, combined with a strongly temperature dependent elastic shear modulus (c11−c12) which approaches zero near 27% Ga. λ111 is significantly smaller in magnitude than λ100 over this composition range, and has an abrupt change in sign from negative for low Ga concentrations to positive for a concentration of Ga near 21%.

503 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a comparative study on the tetragonal magnetostriction constant, λγ,2, [ ] and magnetoelastic coupling, b1, of binary Fe100-xZx and ternary Fe-Ga-Al and Fe-Ge-Ge alloys is presented.
Abstract: This paper presents a comparative study on the tetragonal magnetostriction constant, λγ,2, [ = (3/2)λ100] and magnetoelastic coupling, b1, of binary Fe100-xZx (0 < x < 35, Z = Al, Ga, Ge, and Si) and ternary Fe-Ga-Al and Fe-Ga-Ge alloys. The quantities are corrected for magnetostrains due to sample geometry (the magnetostrictive form effect). Recently published elastic constant data along with magnetization measurements at both room temperature and 77 K make these corrections possible. The form effect correction lowers the magnetostriction by ∼10 ppm for high-modulus alloys and by as much as 30 ppm for low-modulus alloys. The elastic constants are also used to determine the values of the magnetoelastic coupling constant, b1. With the new magnetostriction data on the Fe-Al-Ga alloy, it is possible to show how the double peak magnetostriction feature of the binary Fe-Ga alloy flows into the single peak binary Fe-Al alloy. The corrected magnetostriction and magnetoelastic coupling data for the various alloys...

97 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the second peak in the tetragonal magnetostriction constant λ100 near x=28.8 was found to be caused by magneto-elastic coupling.
Abstract: Elastic shear moduli measurements on Fe100−xGax (x=12–33) single crystals (via resonant ultrasound spectroscopy) with and without a magnetic field and within 4–300 K are reported. The pronounced softening of the tetragonal shear modulus c′ is concluded to be, based on magnetoelastic coupling, the cause of the second peak in the tetragonal magnetostriction constant λ100 near x=28. Exceedingly high ΔE effects (∼25%), combined with the extreme softness in c′ (c′<10GPa), suggest structural changes take place, yet, gradual in nature, as the moduli show a smooth dependence on Ga concentration, temperature, and magnetic field. Shear anisotropy (c44∕c′) as high as 14.7 was observed for Fe71.2Ga28.8.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that adding small amounts of C (0.07, 0.08, and 0.14at.%) increases the magnetostriction of the slow cooled binary alloy to values comparable to the rapidly quenched alloy.
Abstract: Binary iron-gallium (Galfenol) alloys have large magnetostrictions over a wide temperature range. Single crystal measurements show that additions of 2at.% or greater of 3d and 4d transition elements with fewer (V, Cr, Mo, Mn) and more (Co, Ni, Rh) valence electrons than Fe, all reduce the saturation magnetostriction. Kawamiya and Adachi [J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 31–34, 145 (1983)] reported that the D03 structure is stabilized by 3d transition elements with electron∕atom ratios both less than iron and greater than iron. If D03 ordering decreases the magnetostriction, the maximum magnetostriction should be largest for the (more disordered) binary Fe–Ga alloys as observed. Notably, addition of small amounts of C (0.07, 0.08, and 0.14at.%) increases the magnetostriction of the slow cooled binary alloy to values comparable to the rapidly quenched alloy. We assume that small atom (C, B, N) additions enter interstitially and inhibit ordering, thus maximizing the magnetostriction without quenching.

83 citations

Patent
01 Nov 1991
TL;DR: In this article, a magnetic field source is used to bias the magnetic moments of the ferromagnetic layers in a given direction whereby stress applied causes previously antiferromagnetically coupled moments to be angularly realigned toward a Ferromagnetic arrangement.
Abstract: A strain gauge comprised of a magnetic multilayer assembly exhibiting spialve effect with individual ferromagnetic layers possessing magnetostrictive properties. A magnetic field source is used to bias the magnetic moments of the ferromagnetic layers in a given direction whereby stress applied causes previously antiferromagnetically coupled moments to be angularly realigned toward a ferromagnetic arrangement. Such realignment causes a corresponding resistance change of unexpectedly high magnitude thereby providing a highly sensitive strain gauge.

26 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of recent developments in four important categories of magnetic materials that are currently of topical interest: soft magnets, hard magnets, magnetomechanical and magnetoelectronic materials.

427 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review demonstrates the broad applicability of CHT experimentation technologies in discovery and optimization of new materials and critically analyzes results of materials development in the areas most impacted by the CHT approaches.
Abstract: Rational materials design based on prior knowledge is attractive because it promises to avoid time-consuming synthesis and testing of numerous materials candidates. However with the increase of complexity of materials, the scientific ability for the rational materials design becomes progressively limited. As a result of this complexity, combinatorial and high-throughput (CHT) experimentation in materials science has been recognized as a new scientific approach to generate new knowledge. This review demonstrates the broad applicability of CHT experimentation technologies in discovery and optimization of new materials. We discuss general principles of CHT materials screening, followed by the detailed discussion of high-throughput materials characterization approaches, advances in data analysis/mining, and new materials developments facilitated by CHT experimentation. We critically analyze results of materials development in the areas most impacted by the CHT approaches, such as catalysis, electronic and fun...

419 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of stability criteria, thermodynamic functions in the vicinity of an instability, and how instabilities may arise or disappear when pressure, temperature, and/or chemical composition is varied are discussed in this article.
Abstract: Most metallic elements have a crystal structure that is either body-centered cubic (bcc), face-centered close packed, or hexagonal close packed. If the bcc lattice is the thermodynamically most stable structure, the close-packed structures usually are dynamically unstable, i.e., have elastic constants violating the Born stability conditions or, more generally, have phonons with imaginary frequencies. Conversely, the bcc lattice tends to be dynamically unstable if the equilibrium structure is close packed. This striking regularity essentially went unnoticed until ab initio total-energy calculations in the 1990s became accurate enough to model dynamical properties of solids in hypothetical lattice structures. After a review of stability criteria, thermodynamic functions in the vicinity of an instability, Bain paths, and how instabilities may arise or disappear when pressure, temperature, and/or chemical composition is varied are discussed. The role of dynamical instabilities in the ideal strength of solids and in metallurgical phase diagrams is then considered, and comments are made on amorphization, melting, and low-dimensional systems. The review concludes with extensive references to theoretical work on the stability properties of metallic elements.

398 citations

Patent
23 May 1996
TL;DR: In this paper, the magnetoresistance effect element has two ferromagnetic layers, a non-magnetic layer provided between the two layers, and a layer containing an oxide or nitride as a principal component.
Abstract: There are provided a magnetoresistance effect element, a magnetic head, a magnetic head assembly and a magnetic recording system, which have high sensitivity and high reliability. The magnetoresistance effect element has two ferromagnetic layers, a non-magnetic layer provided between the ferromagnetic layers, and a layer containing an oxide or nitride as a principal component, wherein the layer containing the oxide or nitride as the principal component contains a magnetic transition metal element which does not bond to oxygen and nitrogen and which is at least one of Co, Fe and Ni.

389 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the main magnetic characteristics regarding the domain structure and magnetization processes (axial, circular and Matteucci and inverse Wiedemann effects) of amorphous wires and glass-coated microwires are analyzed.
Abstract: The main magnetic characteristics regarding the domain structure and magnetization processes (axial, circular and Matteucci and inverse Wiedemann effects) of amorphous wires and glass-coated microwires are analysed. Magnetic bistability, spontaneously observed in samples with large enough ratio magneto-elastic anisotropy with axial easy axis to shape anisotropy, is the main source for a number of sensor applications in pulse generators, position and field sensors, encoded security tags, rotational counters, magnetostrictive delay lines, and so on. The relevant perspectives of the novel giant magneto-impedance effect recently reported and observed in non-magnetostrictive samples are also introduced.

366 citations