CERAMIC MAGNET Big D350mm
USD $1 - $2 /Unit
Min.Order:500 Units
Shanghai Strong Magnets Industrial And Commercial Company Ltd.
General Information
Manufacturing:
Pressing and sintering involves pressing very fine ferrite powder in a die, and then sintering this pressed magnet. All fully dense Ferrite magnets are produced this way. Ferrite magnets can be wet pressed or dry pressed. Wet pressing yields better magnetic properties, but poorer physical tolerances. Generally, the powder is dry for grade 1 or 5 materials, and wet for grade 8 and higher materials. Sintering involves subjecting the material to high temperatures to fuse the pressed powder together, thus creating a solid material. Magnets produced through this process usually need to have some finish machining, otherwise surface finishes and tolerances are not acceptable. Some manufacturers extrude instead of press wet powder slurry and then sinter the material. This is sometimes done for arc segment shapes, where the arc cross-section is extruded in long lengths, sintered, and then cut to length.
Injection Molding: Ferrite powder is mixed into a compound and then injection molded in the same way as plastic.
Tooling for this manufacturing process is usually very costly. However, parts produced through this process can have very intricate shapes and tight tolerances. Injection molded ferrite properties are either lower or about the same as grade 1 Ferrite.
Surface Treatments
The corrosion resistance of Ferrite is considered excellent , and no surface treatments are required.
However, Ferrite magnets may have a thin film of fine magnet powder on the surface and for clean, non-contaminated applications, some form of coating may be required.
Magnetizing and Handling
Ferrite magnets require magnetizing fields of about 10 kOe.
They can be magnetized with multiple poles on one or both pole surfaces.
No special handling precautions are required, except that large blocks of Ferrite magnets are powerful, and care should be taken to ensure that they do not snap towards each other.
Temperature Effects
Up to about 840F, changes in magnetization are largely reversible, while changes between 840F and 1800 F are re-magnetizable.
For all Ferrite magnets, the degradation of magnetic properties is essentially linear with temperature.
At 350 F, about 75% of room temperature magnetization is retained, and at 550 F, about 50% is retained.
Common Applications for Ferrite Magnets
Ferrite magnets are widely used in motors, magnetic couplings, for sensing, loudspeakers, holding-magnet systems, crafts, magnetic therapy, novelties, and toys.
Material: | Ferrite Permanent Magnet | ||||
Shapes: | Ring, disk, block ETC | ||||
Features: |
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Applications: | DC motors, Louder-speaks, Magnetic Separators, Automotive Sensors, Educations, etc. | ||||
Magnetic Performance | |||||
Grade | Remanence Br mT (kGs) | Coercive force HcB KA/m (KOe) | Magnetic energy product Max KJ/m3 MGOe | Equivalents | |
Y10T | 200-218 | 125-145 | 6.5-8.0 | C1 | |
2.00-2.18 | 1.57-1.82 | 0.8-1.0 | |||
Y25 | 360-370 | 135-150 | 22.5-25.3 | ||
3.60-3.70 | 1.70-1.88 | 2.8-3.2 | |||
Y30 | 380-390 | 191-210 | 27-30 | ||
3.80-3.90 | 2.40-2.64 | 3.4-3.7 | |||
Y33 | 400-410 | 175-195 | 30.0-31.5 | C5 | |
4.00-4.10 | 2.20-2.45 | 3.8-4.0 | |||
Y35 | 410-420 | 220-235 | 31.5-33.0 | ||
4.10-4.20 | 2.77-2.95 | 4.0-4.2 | |||
Y30BH | 380-390 | 223-235 | 27.0-30.0 | C8 | |
3.80-3.90 | 2.80-2.95 | 3.4-3.7 | |||
Y33BH | 400-410 | 288-300 | 30.4-31.5 | ||
4.00-4.10 | 3.62-3.77 | 3.8-4.0 | |||
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FOR QUOTATION, PLEASE WRITE TO US WITH THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION:
FOR QUOTATION, PLEASE WRITE TO US WITH THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION: