Ferromagnetic Disordered Alloy Research Group of School of Materials Science and Engineering, Southeast University was established in October 2012. There are 3 professors, 1 associate professor, and more than 20 Ph.D. / master students. The main research directions are: exploration, preparation and application research of amorphous / nanocrystalline soft magnetic alloys, the magnetic and thermal properties of rare earth-based metallic glass, mechanical properties of ferromagnetic bulk amorphous alloys, degradation and catalytic properties of amorphous alloys, and thermodynamics and dynamic behavior of amorphous alloys.
Since our establishment, the research group has published nearly 50 SCI theses in J. Mater., Chem. A., Corros. Sci., ACS Appl., Nano Mater., Mater. Des., J. Alloys Compd., Intermetallics, J. Magn. Magn. Mater. and other important academic journals and applied for nearly 10 invention patents. We have undertaken more than 10 the State Key Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China, the General Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China, Frontier Scientific and Technological Innovation Projects of the Science and Technology Commission of the Military Commission, and Special Funding Projects for the Transformation of Scientific and Technological Achievements in Jiangsu Province.
The research group and college analysis and testing center have complete sample preparation, performance testing and structural characterization methods, such as high-vacuum arc melting furnace, high-vacuum induction melting / quick quenching equipment, high-vacuum suction-casting equipment, vacuum heat treatment furnace and other sample preparation equipment ; High-temperature differential scanning calorimeter, AC / DC hysteresiscope, vibration sample magnetometer, electrochemical workstation, universal testing machine, microhardness tester, X-ray diffractometer, field-emission scanning electron microscope, high-resolution transmission electron microscope and other performance testing and structure characterization equipment.
photo of members of the research group