Breakthrough in materials research: The metal that does not expand
An alloy of several metals has been developed that shows practically no thermal expansion over an extremely large temperature interval
Now, a collaboration between theoretical researchers at TU Wien (Vienna) and experimentalists at University of Science and Technology Beijing has led to a decisive breakthrough: using complex computer simulations, it has been possible to understand the invar effect in detail and thus develop a so-called pyrochlore magnet – an alloy that has even better thermal expansion properties than invar. Over an extremely wide temperature range of over 400 Kelvins, its length only changes by around one ten-thousandth of one per cent per Kelvin.
Thermal expansion and its antagonist
“The higher the temperature in a material, the more the atoms tend to move – and when the atoms move more, they need more space. The average distance between them increases,” explains Dr Sergii Khmelevskyi from the Vienna Scientific Cluster (VSC) Research Centre at TU Wien. “This effect is the basis of thermal expansion and cannot be prevented. But it is possible to produce materials in which it is almost exactly balanced out by another, compensating effect.”
Segii Khmelevskyi and his team developed complex computer simulations that can be used to analyse the behavior of the magnetic materials at finite temperature on the atomic level. “This enabled us to better understand the reason why invar hardly expands at all,’ says Khmelevskyi. “The effect is due to certain electrons changing their state as the temperature rises. The magnetic order in the material decreases, causing the material to contract. This effect almost exactly cancels the usual thermal expansion.”
It had already been known that the magnetic order in the material is responsible for the invar effect. But only with the computer simulations from Vienna, it became possible to understand the details of this process so precisely that predictions for other materials could be made. “For the first time, a theory is available that can make concrete predictions for the development of new materials with vanishing thermal expansion,” says Sergii Khmelevskyi.
The pyrochlore magnet with Kagome planes
In order to test these predictions in practice, Sergii Khmelevskyi worked together with the experimental team of Prof. Xianran Xing and Ass. Prof. Yili Cao from the Institute of the Solid State Chemistry of the University of Science and Technology Beijing. The result of this co-operation has now been presented: The so-called pyrochlore magnet.
In contrast to previous invar alloys, which only consist of two different metals, the pyrochlore magnet has four components: Zirconium, niobium, iron and cobalt. “It is a material with an extremely low coefficient of thermal expansion over an unprecedentedly wide temperature range,” says Yili Cao.
This remarkable temperature behaviour has to do with the fact that the pyrochlore magnet does not have a perfect lattice structure that always repeats itself in exactly the same way. The composition of the material is not the same at every point, it is heterogeneous. Some areas contain a little more cobalt, some a little less. Both subsystems react differently to temperature changes. This allows the details of the material composition to be balanced point by point in such a way that the overall temperature expansion is almost exactly zero.
The material could be of particular interest in applications with extreme temperature fluctuations or precise measuring techniques, such as in aviation, aerospace or high-precision electronic components.
Original publication
Sergii Khmelevskyi, Soner Steiner; "Predictive Theory of Anomalous Volume Magnetostriction in Fe–Ni Alloys: Bond Repopulation Mechanism of the Invar Effect"; The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, Volume 128, 2023-12-28
Y. Sun et al., Local chemical heterogeneity enabled superior zero thermal expansion in nonstoichiometric pyrochlore magnets, National Science Review, nwae46