Abstract:
The atomic structure of Fe–Al (7 and 9 at % Al) and Fe–Ga (18 at % Ga) alloys is studied by X-ray diffraction using a laboratory four-circle diffractometer. After refining annealing, single-crystal alloy samples were annealed in the ferromagnetic state $(T<T_C)$. One sample of the Fe–18 at % Ga alloy, after short holding in the paramagnetic state $(T>T_C)$, was quenched in room temperature water. Earlier, the authors reported on the peculiarities of the ordering of alloying atoms in $B$2 and $D0_3$ phase structures in quenched and annealed samples of these alloys. Here, we present and discuss the results of our observations in these alloys of a new phase with a face-centered cubic (fcc) lattice ($B$1-type structure with NaCl prototype and unit cell parameter $\sim$5.2 nm). The fcc phase appears in the Fe–Al alloy as the aluminum concentration increases from 7 to 9 at %; it is observed in the Fe–18 at % Ga alloy, and its volume fraction increases after annealing in the ferromagnetic state in comparison with a quenched alloy sample. In these alloys (9 at % Al) and (18 at % Ga), different ways of embedding fcc crystals in the bcc phase of single crystals are realized; i.e., the axes of the fcc lattice are directed in four different ways relative to the axes of the bcc lattice.
Keywords:soft magnetic materials, iron–aluminum and iron–gallium alloys, X-ray diffraction, atomic structure, new $B$1-type phase, heat treatment.