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Curie Temperature

Curie temperature (Tc), or Curie point, is a transition point where a magnet loses its spontaneous magnetization when it is heated to the Tc point. Below the Tc point, a ferromagnet or ferrimagnet has its spontaneous magnetization due to alignment of atomic magnetic moments. Above the Tc point, as energy is absorbed to disorder the magnetic moments, it turns to be paramagnetic.

Figure 1. The temperature dependence of the magnetization of a magnet. M-T curve.

Table 1. Some magnetic materials’ Curie temperature, maximum operating temperature [1][6]

Material Tc Max. Operating Temperature
K °C °F K °C °F
Iron 1043 770 1418      
Cobalt 1388 1115 2039      
Nickel 628 355 671      
Samarium Cobalt 973-1123 700-850 1292-1562 623 350 660
Neodymium Magnet 583-673 310-400 590-752 503 230 446
Sm2Fe17N3 749 476 889 473 200 392
Ceramic Magnet 723 450 842 523 250 482
Fe3O4 860 587 1089      
Alnico 1023-1163 750-890 1382-1634 823 550 1020
Fe-Cr-Co 913 640 1184 773 500 932
CoPt 840 567 1053      
Permalloy 843 570 1058      
MnBi 633 360 680      
References

[1] J.M.D. Coey, Magnetism and Magnetic Materials, Cambridge University Press & Peking University Press, 2014.

[2] PRC National Standard GB/T 4180-2012, Permanent Magnetic Material of Rare Earth Cobalt.

[3] PRC National Standard GB/T 13560-2009, Materials for Sintered Neodymium Iron Boron Permanent Magnets.

[4] MMPA Standard 0100-00, Standard Specifications for Permanent Magnet Materials.

[5] Shouzeng Zhou, Qingfei Dong, Super Strong Permanent Magnets, Metallurgical Industry Press, 2004.

[6] Kinjal Gandha, M. P. Paranthaman, Brian C. Sales, et al., “3D Printing of Anisotropic Sm-Fe-N Nylon Bonded Permanent Magnets”. Engineering Reports 3 (12), e12478 (2021).

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