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Tetrataenite
Tetrataenite
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Tetrataenite
Silvery-bright tetrataenite crystals
General
CategoryNative element minerals
FormulaFeNi
IMA symbolTtae[1]
Strunz classification1.AE.10
Crystal systemTetragonal
Crystal classDomatic (m)
(same H-M symbol)
Space groupP4/mmm[2]
Unit cell22.92 ų
Identification
Formula mass57.27 gm
Colorgray white, silver white
Crystal habitGranular – Common texture observed in granite and other igneous rock
Cleavagenone
Fracturemalleable
Mohs scale hardness3.5
Lustermetallic
Streakgray
Diaphaneityopaque
Density8.275
Common impuritiesCo, Cu, P
References[3][4][5]

[1]

[2]

Tetrataenite is a native metal alloy composed of chemically-ordered L10-type FeNi, recognized as a mineral in 1980.[6] The mineral is named after its tetragonal crystal structure and its relation to the iron-nickel alloy, taenite, which is chemically disordered (A1) phase with an underlying fcc lattice.[7] Tetrataenite is one of the mineral phases found in meteoric iron.[8][4][9] Before its discovery in meteoritic samples, experimental synthesis of the L10 phase was first reported in 1962 by Louis Néel and co-workers, following neutron irradiation of a chemically disordered FeNi sample under an applied magnetic field.[10][11][12] Compared to the magnetically soft, chemically disordered A1 phase (taenite), the tetragonal L10 structure of tetrataenite leads to good hard magnetic properties, including a large uniaxial magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy.[11][13] Consequently, it is under consideration for applications as a rare-earth-free permanent magnet.[14]

Formation

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Tetrataenite forms naturally in iron meteorites that contain taenite that are slow-cooled at a rate of a few degrees per million years, which allows for ordering of the Fe and Ni atoms.[6] It is found most abundantly in slow-cooled chondrite meteorites,[15] as well as in mesosiderites.[6] At high (as much as 52%) Ni content and temperatures below 320 °C (the chemical order-disorder transition temperature[10]), tetrataenite is broken down from taenite and distorts its face centered cubic crystal structure to form the chemically ordered, tetragonal L10 structure.[16] Computational investigations into the phase stability of Fe-Ni alloys have suggested that ferromagnetic ordering plays a key role in making the chemically ordered L10 structure thermodynamically stable.[17]

In 2015, it was reported that tetrataenite was found in a terrestrial rock – a magnetite body from the Indo-Myanmar ranges of northeast India.[18]

It is reported that the L10 phase can be synthetically produced by neutron- or electron-irradiation of chemically disordered (A1) FeNi below 593 K,[10][11][12] by hydrogen-reduction of nanometric NiFe2O4,[18] or by combined application of mechanical stress and magnetic field during annealing of the chemically disordered A1 phase.[19]

Potential laboratory protocols for bulk synthesis

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Applied Stress and Magnetic Field

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It has been reported that the combined application of mechanical stress and a modest magnetic field during the annealing process can accelerate the formation of the atomically ordered L10 phase in bulk samples.[19]

Addition of Phosphorus (Article Retracted)

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In 2022, it was reported that mixing iron and nickel together in specific quantities, with a phosphorus catalyst, and smelting the mixture, formed tetrataenite in bulk quantities, in seconds.[20][21] However, in late 2024, the article originally reporting this result was retracted by the journal[22] due to 'misinterpretation of the experimental data'. A subsequent Comment, published by a group containing many of the original article's authors, provided both reinterpretation of the original data as well as new measurements, and showed that the Bragg peaks originally attributed to presence of tetrataenite in the samples were, in fact, caused by the presence of phosphides.[23]

Crystal structure

[edit]

Tetrataenite has a highly ordered crystal structure,[16] appearing creamy in color and displaying optical anisotropy.[6] Its appearance is distinguishable from taenite, which is dark gray with low reflectivity.[18] FeNi easily forms into a cubic crystal structure, but does not have magnetic anisotropy in this form. Three variants of the L10 tetragonal crystal structure have been found, as chemical ordering can occur along any of the three axes.[14]

Magnetic properties

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Tetrataenite displays permanent magnetization, in particular, high coercivity.[24] It has a large uniaxial magnetocrystalline anisotropy[13] and theoretical magnetic energy product, the maximum amount of magnetic energy stored, over 335 kJ m−3.[24] The L10 phase has a theoretical Curie temperature of over 1000 K,[13] resulting in a magnetic anisotropy which is predicted to remain large up to and beyond room temperature.

Applications

[edit]

Tetrataenite is a candidate for replacing rare-earth permanent magnets such as samarium and neodymium since both iron and nickel are earth-abundant and inexpensive.[25]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Tetrataenite is a rare, equiatomic iron-nickel (FeNi) recognized as a , featuring a highly ordered L1₀-type tetragonal that imparts exceptional magnetic properties. It forms through the atomic ordering of iron and within , typically under ultra-slow cooling conditions spanning millions of years, and is distinguished by its creamy appearance, metallic luster, and anisotropy in reflected light. First identified in 1978 through and X-ray diffraction analyses of meteoritic samples, tetrataenite was formally approved as a new by the International Mineralogical Association (IMA) in 1980, with its type locality in the Estherville mesosiderite. The structure belongs to the P4/mmm, with lattice parameters a ≈ 2.533 and c ≈ 3.582 , and it exhibits a hardness of 170–200, a calculated specific of 8.28, and Mohs hardness of 3½. Its composition is nearly ideal Fe, with content ranging from 48–57 wt.% and minor traces of (0.11–0.36 wt.%), (up to 2.0 wt.%), and (<0.01 wt.%). Tetrataenite predominantly occurs in extraterrestrial settings, embedded as fine-grained (10–50 μm) lamellae, rims (1–20 μm wide) on taenite, or submicrometer particles within cloudy taenite in over 50 iron-nickel meteorites, including ordinary chondrites and mesosiderites. It is most abundant in slowly cooled meteorites, where cooling rates below 350°C enable the necessary atomic diffusion for ordering. Rare terrestrial occurrences have been documented, such as in hydrothermal alteration products within Ni-bearing magnetite in ophiolite complexes in northeast India, suggesting formation via reducing, low-temperature, sulfur-poor fluids rather than slow cooling. Beyond its geological significance, tetrataenite's hard-magnetic properties—comparable to rare-earth permanent magnets—have spurred research into synthetic production for industrial applications, with 2024 advances demonstrating enhanced chemical ordering and magnetism in annealed FeNi alloys. This potential positions it as a sustainable alternative to neodymium-based magnets in electric vehicles and renewable energy technologies, though natural samples remain scarce and primarily of scientific interest.

Overview and Occurrence

Definition and Discovery

Tetrataenite is a native metal alloy consisting of equiatomic iron and nickel (FeNi) with a chemically ordered L10-type structure, forming through the atomic ordering of the face-centered cubic taenite phase. It was formally recognized as a distinct mineral by the International Mineralogical Association in 1980, following approval by the Commission's on New Minerals and Mineral Names, with the type locality in the Estherville mesosiderite. This mineral is characterized by its tetragonal crystal system, distinguishing it from the disordered cubic structure of taenite. The ordered FeNi phase underlying tetrataenite was first identified in the mid-1970s through Mössbauer spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction studies on samples from the Cape York and Toluca iron meteorites, conducted by Niels Albertsen and colleagues. Earlier observations in the 1960s and 1970s had noted anomalous microstructures in taenite from ataxite meteorites, initially described as "cloudy taenite" due to its hazy appearance under optical microscopy, with key contributions from researchers like G.J. Taylor and D. Heymann in 1971 who termed similar features "clear taenite" in chondrites. In 1980, Roy S. Clarke Jr. and Edward R.D. Scott provided the definitive description, naming the mineral tetrataenite to reflect its tetragonal symmetry and relation to taenite, a suggestion from Dr. A. Kato of the IMA Commission. The name tetrataenite derives from the Greek prefix "tetra-" (indicating four, alluding to the ) combined with "taenite," the pre-existing nickel-iron alloy mineral from which it orders. This etymology highlights its structural evolution from . Tetrataenite is extremely rare on Earth, as its formation requires prolonged low-temperature annealing in highly reducing conditions absent from most terrestrial environments, primarily confining its natural occurrence to extraterrestrial settings like , with rare documented terrestrial occurrences. Its strong ferromagnetic nature has sparked interest in potential applications as a rare-earth-free permanent magnet material.

Natural Occurrence

Tetrataenite primarily occurs in iron-nickel meteorites, where it forms as fine-grained intergrowths or nanoscale lamellae within taenite grains, particularly in the cloudy zones of the Widmanstätten pattern. It is most prevalent in slowly cooled specimens such as medium to coarse octahedrites and ataxites, which represent fragments of differentiated asteroidal cores. In these meteorites, tetrataenite constitutes a minor to significant portion of the metallic phases, depending on the taenite regions. Notable examples include the Cape York meteorite, a medium octahedrite discovered in Greenland in 1818, where tetrataenite rims taenite lamellae and contributes to the meteorite's magnetic signature. Similarly, the Sikhote-Alin meteorite, a coarse octahedrite that fell in Russia in 1947, contains tetrataenite in its plessite fields and taenite-taenite boundaries, identified through detailed mineral mapping. The Mundrabilla meteorite, an anomalous iron found in Australia in 1911, exhibits tetrataenite as ordered domains within its primary taenite, comprising a significant portion of the high-nickel metallic structure. Tetrataenite coexists with kamacite (low-nickel body-centered cubic iron), taenite (face-centered cubic iron-nickel alloy), and schreibersite ((Fe,Ni)3P) in the characteristic Widmanstätten patterns of these meteorites, often forming at the interfaces where diffusion gradients promote atomic ordering. In the astrophysical context, it develops over millions of years during the slow cooling of asteroidal cores at rates of approximately 1-10 °C per million years, driven by sluggish in Fe-Ni alloys under reducing, low-temperature (below 350 °C) conditions that prevent oxidation. Detection of tetrataenite in meteoritic samples relies on advanced analytical techniques, including electron microprobe analysis to measure its near-equiatomic Fe-Ni composition (typically 48-57 wt% Ni), to confirm the ordered L10 structure, and to identify the tetragonal lattice distortions distinguishing it from disordered . This ordered structure enables tetrataenite to exhibit strong room-temperature , preserving paleomagnetic records from its parent body.

Formation and Synthesis

Natural Formation Processes

Tetrataenite forms in parent bodies through a series of low-temperature processes involving chemical ordering in iron- (Fe-Ni) alloys. The key mechanism begins with of the face-centered cubic (fcc) phase, a high- , which creates nanoscale compositional modulations rich in iron and . Below approximately 320°C, these modulations undergo atomic diffusion-driven ordering, transitioning the disordered to the ordered tetragonal L10 phase characteristic of tetrataenite, where iron and atoms alternate in a layered structure. This ordering requires extraordinarily slow cooling rates in the parent bodies, typically ranging from 0.5 to 5°C per million years, sustained over timescales of 10 to 100 million years to permit sufficient atomic for the L10 structure to develop. Such conditions occur during the protracted cooling of metallic cores in differentiated asteroids following their formation and . These rates ensure that the diffusion kinetics allow for the necessary atomic rearrangements without kinetic arrest in metastable disordered states. Influencing factors include the alloy's composition, particularly with minor phosphorus content (up to ~0.3 at.%), which enhances kinetics to aid atomic ordering during the slow cooling process. In some samples, exposure during the meteorite's transit through space may introduce defects that subtly affect the local structure post-formation, though the primary ordering occurs in the parent body. Astrophysically, tetrataenite serves as a robust paleomagnetic recorder, preserving thermoremanent acquired during cooling through its formation around 4.5 billion years ago, thereby capturing evidence of early solar system generated during differentiation and core solidification. This linkage provides insights into the activity and thermal evolution of protoplanetary bodies in the nascent solar system. Experimental analogs, including numerical simulations of kinetics and phase transformations under controlled cooling rates, confirm that minimum durations exceeding 10 million years are required for detectable L10 ordering in Fe-Ni alloys, validating the natural timescales inferred from meteoritic microstructures. These simulations highlight the sensitivity of ordering to profiles below °C. Replicating such extended timescales artificially remains challenging due to practical constraints on laboratory durations.

Artificial Synthesis Methods

The synthesis of tetrataenite, the ordered L1₀-FeNi phase, faces significant challenges due to high energy barriers for atomic ordering, primarily stemming from slow kinetics in the equiatomic . The for the chemical disordering process, which mirrors the barrier for ordering, is approximately 3.08 eV/atom (equivalent to ~300 kJ/mol), limiting the transformation rate at accessible temperatures. Early laboratory efforts in the and focused on enhancing through severe plastic deformation techniques like high-pressure torsion (HPT), followed by prolonged annealing. For instance, equiatomic FeNi processed by HPT at 2 GPa and , then annealed at 320°C for up to 960 hours (40 days), exhibited partial L1₀ ordering with reflections detectable by X-ray diffraction, though the degree of order remained low (<10%). Complementary approaches involved applying magnetic fields (1–10 T) during cooling or annealing to align atomic along preferred directions, as demonstrated in neutron irradiation experiments from the where a 1 T field during irradiation at 400–500°C accelerated ordering in thin foils. More specific protocols combined applied stress and magnetic fields to promote ordering. A 2023 study applied ~6 MPa uniaxial tensile stress and a ~0.7 T magnetic field concurrently during annealing at ~285°C for 48 days, yielding up to 22 vol% tetrataenite phase in bulk samples, as quantified by electron microscopy and diffraction. A 2015 method involving phosphorus addition (~1.2 wt% P in a Fe-Ni-Si-B-Cu-P alloy) and annealing at 400°C for 288 hours achieved ~8 vol% L1₀ ordering in melt-spun ribbons. A 2022 report claimed direct formation of tetrataenite in bulk castings via phosphorus additions (0.4–1.0 at.% P) during cooling at rates of 10–10⁴ K/s, but this was retracted in December 2024 due to phase impurities and lack of evidence for the L1₀ structure. Recent advances up to 2025 have emphasized accelerated, scalable techniques. Mechanical activation via ball milling of FeNi powders, combined with interstitial additions like nitrogen (mechanochemical nitrogenation at 300°C for 50 hours followed by denitrogenation under hydrogen below 320°C), achieved high chemical order (order parameter S ≈ 0.7–0.8) in single-phase powders, with processing times reduced to days rather than months. Neutron irradiation remains a benchmark for rapid induction, as in classic 1980s protocols exposing FeNi to fast neutrons (fluence ~10^{19} n/cm²) at 500°C for hours, producing ordered domains measurable by Mössbauer spectroscopy. Laser melting of mechanically alloyed FeNi, using a diode laser with power density of 1 J/mm² (heating rates ~10^6 K/s) under inert atmosphere, induced ~9.5 wt% local L1₀ ordering, as reported in a 2024 study. Micromagnetic simulations have guided these optimizations by predicting field and stress effects on domain alignment, informing parameter selection for higher yield. The degree of L1₀ order in synthesized samples is typically evaluated via superlattice diffraction peaks in X-ray or electron diffraction patterns, where peak intensity ratios indicate the order parameter S (ideal S=1 for full ordering), or through saturation magnetization values approaching 1.27 T for well-ordered phases, as measured by vibrating sample magnetometry.

Structure and Composition

Chemical Composition

Tetrataenite possesses an ideal equiatomic stoichiometry of \ceFe50Ni50\ce{Fe_{50}Ni_{50}} (50 at% each), corresponding to approximately 48.7 wt% Fe and 51.3 wt% Ni. This composition places it within the Fe-Ni binary phase diagram, where the ordered L1₀ phase is thermodynamically stable below 320 °C. Natural meteoritic samples, however, show compositional variations typically between 45 and 55 at% Ni, with some Fe-rich examples reaching up to 57 at% Fe and 43 at% Ni, as observed in the NWA 6259 meteorite. These variations are confirmed via energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) for in situ microanalysis and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) for bulk elemental quantification on meteoritic specimens. Trace minor elements are present in tetrataenite, including 0.1–1 wt% Co, <0.5 wt% P, and 0.1–1 wt% S, which influence the kinetics of atomic ordering during formation. Slightly Fe-rich compositions, such as ~51 at% Fe in select meteorites, can modulate magnetic anisotropy by altering site occupancy in the ordered lattice. Synthetic tetrataenite targets the precise 50:50 at% ratio to replicate natural hard-magnetic behavior. The equiatomic Fe-Ni ratio enables tetragonal distortion in the lattice through alternating atomic layers, a direct consequence of chemical ordering in the L1₀ phase.

Crystal Structure

Tetrataenite possesses an ordered tetragonal L1₀ structure of the CuAu type, characterized by the space group P4/mmm, in which iron and nickel atoms alternate in layers along the c-axis on (002) planes. This atomic arrangement arises from the chemical ordering of the face-centered cubic taenite phase, leading to a body-centered tetragonal lattice. The lattice parameters of tetrataenite are typically a = 0.2533 nm and c = 0.3582 nm, yielding a c/a ratio of approximately 1.41 that signifies the tetragonal distortion relative to the disordered face-centered cubic precursor. The primitive unit cell comprises two atoms, with Fe occupying the (0,0,0) Wyckoff position and Ni at (0.5,0.5,0.5). The extent of long-range atomic order is described by the order parameter S = \sqrt{I_{\text{superlattice}} / I_{\text{fundamental}}}, where I denotes integrated peak intensities from diffraction; in natural samples, S reaches values up to 0.9, indicating near-complete ordering. In meteoritic occurrences, tetrataenite manifests as nanolamellae approximately 10–50 nm thick embedded within the cloudy zone of taenite grains or as equiaxed grains up to several micrometers in size, with twinning frequently observed and linked to the martensitic transformation during slow cooling. Characterization of the crystal structure relies on X-ray diffraction, which displays superlattice reflections such as (110) and (101) that confirm the ordered tetragonal symmetry beyond the fundamental peaks of the disordered phase. Transmission electron microscopy reveals antiphase boundaries within the tetrataenite domains, often associated with minor low-Ni taenite inclusions that delineate the boundaries.

Electronic Structure

The electronic band structure of L1₀ FeNi (tetrataenite) has been calculated using density functional theory (DFT) as implemented in the Quantum ESPRESSO package. The alloy is metallic with no band gap. Multiple spin-polarized bands cross the Fermi level, leading to complex Fermi surface topologies for spin-up and spin-down states. A pseudogap appears in the density of states at the Fermi level.

Physical Properties

Magnetic Properties

Tetrataenite exhibits strong ferromagnetism with a Curie temperature of approximately 550°C, enabling stable magnetization at room temperature. Its saturation magnetization (Ms) reaches about 1.45 T at room temperature, comparable to rare-earth-based NdFeB magnets but without relying on scarce rare-earth elements. This high Ms arises from the ferromagnetic ordering in the Fe-Ni lattice, making tetrataenite a promising candidate for advanced permanent magnets. As a hard magnetic material, tetrataenite displays coercivity (Hc) in the range of 0.2–0.6 T and remanence (Br) around 1 T, attributed to its uniaxial magnetocrystalline anisotropy constant (Ku) of approximately 10^6 J/m³ stemming from the L1₀ atomic ordering. The structural basis for this anisotropy involves alternating Fe and Ni layers in the tetragonal structure, which induce strong directional preference in magnetization. In hysteresis loops, fully ordered tetrataenite samples show a high squareness ratio (Br/Bs) exceeding 0.8, indicative of efficient remanent magnetization retention. Micromagnetic simulations reveal that domain wall pinning at structural defects contributes to this behavior, enhancing resistance to demagnetization. The magnetic properties of tetrataenite are temperature-dependent, with L1₀ ordering below 320°C significantly enhancing anisotropy and stabilizing the hard magnetic traits. In natural meteoritic samples, tetrataenite preserves records of ancient magnetic fields in asteroids, typically 10–50 μT, providing insights into early solar system dynamos. Synthetic variants achieve 60–80% of the natural Ms due to incomplete ordering, though 2023 simulations predict a maximum energy product ((BH)max) of ~50 MGOe for optimized fully ordered structures.

Mechanical and Thermal Properties

Tetrataenite exhibits a density of 8.28 g/cm³, which is comparable to that of pure iron. The mineral's hardness ranges from 170 to 200 HV (under a 25 g load), reflecting the enhanced rigidity imparted by its ordered L1₀ structure relative to disordered FeNi phases; this value is higher than the typical 100-150 HV observed in . In meteoritic samples, tetrataenite contributes to the overall mechanical strength of iron meteorites, with average compressive strengths around 430 MPa across the alloy matrix. Polycrystalline forms of tetrataenite display , limiting under tensile loading. Thermal properties of tetrataenite align closely with those of equiatomic FeNi alloys, featuring a coefficient of of approximately 1.2 × 10^{-6} K^{-1} (20–100°C) and thermal conductivity around 10.4 W/m·K at . The is about 1450°C. Electrical resistivity measures roughly 20 μΩ·cm at ambient conditions, with values increasing upon atomic ordering. Tetrataenite demonstrates good corrosion resistance in inert atmospheres, benefiting from nickel's protective role, but it oxidizes readily in air exposure.

Applications and Research

Potential Applications

Tetrataenite, an ordered L1₀ FeNi alloy, is primarily investigated as a rare-earth-free permanent magnet material for applications in electric vehicles, wind turbines, and consumer electronics, where its theoretical maximum energy product ((BH)max) of approximately 42 MGOe rivals that of rare-earth magnets like NdFeB while offering scalability through abundant feedstocks. This positions it as a viable alternative to rare-earth-based magnets like NdFeB in high-demand sectors requiring efficient, lightweight components. Recent studies have explored FeNi-L1₀ prototypes for integration into electric motors, highlighting its suitability for drive systems in electric vehicles due to thermal stability up to 530°C, which exceeds typical operating temperatures of 150–220°C. Nanoscale tetrataenite composites are also being developed for high-frequency electronic devices, capitalizing on the material's ordered structure for enhanced performance in compact . Beyond magnet technology, tetrataenite serves in studies of samples returned or analyzed from missions, where its magnetic preserves records of early solar dynamos in iron meteorites. Additionally, its perpendicular enables potential use in spintronic memory devices, such as those requiring stable, high-anisotropy layers for . The economic advantages of tetrataenite stem from the abundance and low cost of iron (approximately $0.50/kg) and ($15/kg), yielding a material cost of around $10/kg, compared to over $100/kg for in rare-earth magnets. This reduces dependency on geopolitically sensitive rare-earth supply chains and mitigates environmental impacts from , such as habitat disruption and . However, commercialization is hindered by scalability challenges, with current synthesis methods limited to yields below 1 g per batch, necessitating advances in bulk processing for widespread adoption.

Research Challenges and Advances

During the 1980s and 1990s, on tetrataenite primarily focused on characterizing its and magnetic properties in meteoritic samples, but laboratory synthesis proved elusive due to the material's sluggish atomic diffusion kinetics at the order-disorder transition temperature of approximately 593 . Efforts in the 2000s and 2010s shifted toward artificial production, yet achieving high degrees of chemical order remained challenging, with maximum reported L1₀ phase fractions limited to 19 wt% in bulk samples and difficulties in quantifying order parameters leading to interpretive errors in some studies. For instance, a 2022 study claiming bulk tetrataenite formation via phosphorus additions up to 13 at.% was retracted in 2024 after reinterpretation revealed no evidence of the L1₀ phase on any length scale, underscoring persistent verification issues in synthesis claims. Significant advances emerged in the through advanced imaging and processing techniques. A 2021 study utilizing (TEM) revealed a previously hidden FeNi nanophase within the NWA 6259 , coexisting with Ni-poor and Ni-rich nanoprecipitates in a tetrataenite matrix, providing new insights into natural atomic-scale heterogeneity. In 2023, researchers accelerated atomic ordering in equiatomic FeNi by applying simultaneous magnetic and stress fields during annealing, achieving up to 22 vol% L1₀ tetrataenite in bulk samples over six weeks—a process estimated to be 10 or more orders of magnitude faster than meteoritic cooling—by lowering kinetic barriers and enhancing diffusion, potentially via induced defects. A 2025 review highlights ongoing difficulties in bulk fabrication due to phase instability and grain-size effects, with current achievements limited to powders and thin films. Ongoing faces key hurdles, including the production of tetrataenite with over 90% order in batches exceeding 1 kg, as laboratory samples consistently exhibit lower atomic order than natural meteoritic counterparts, limiting . Scalability for industrial magnet applications remains constrained by the need for extreme processing conditions, such as prolonged annealing below 593 to avoid disordering, while the precise role of defects in modulating requires further elucidation through multi-scale modeling. These challenges highlight the gap between theoretical of approximately 42 MGOe and practical achievements. Future directions emphasize optimizing synthesis protocols via computational simulations to predict defect behaviors and ordering kinetics, alongside explorations in additive manufacturing for custom magnet geometries. Tetrataenite also intersects with , where its magnetic in meteorites serves as a proxy for early solar system paleofields, informing models of and core activity.

References

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