Inverse magnetostrictive effect

The inverse magnetostrictive effect (also known as Villari effect) is the name given to the change of the magnetic susceptibility of a material when subjected to a mechanical stress.

Explanation

Whereas magnetostriction characterizes the shape change of a ferromagnetic material during magnetization, the inverse magnetostrictive effect characterizes the change of domain magnetization when a stress is applied to a material. This magnetostriction can be positive (magnetization increased by tension) like in pure iron, or negative (magnetization decreased by tension) like in nickel. In the case of a single stress \sigma applied on a single magnetic domain, the magnetic strain energy density E_\sigma can be expressed as [1] :

E_\sigma = \frac{3}{2} \lambda_s \sigma \sin^2(\theta)

where \lambda_s is the magnetostrictive expansion at saturation, and \theta the angle between the saturation magnetization and the stressed direction. When \lambda_s and \sigma are both positive (like in iron under tension), the energy is minimum for \theta = 0, i.e. when tension is aligned with the saturation magnetization. Consequently, the magnetization is increased by tension.

In fact, magnetostriction is more complex and depends on the direction of the crystal axes. In iron, the [100] axes are the directions of easy magnetization, while there is little magnetization along the [111] directions (unless the magnetization becomes close to the saturation magnetization, leading to the change of the domain orientation from [111] to [100]). This magnetic anisotropy pushed authors to define two independent longitudinal magnetostrictions \lambda_{100} and \lambda_{111}.

References

  1. ^ Bozorth, R. (1951). Ferromagnetism. Van Nostrand. 

See also