ferrite

listen to the pronunciation of ferrite
Englisch - Englisch
any of a class of metal oxides which show ferrimagnetism; used in transformers, inductors, antennas, recording heads, microwave devices, motors and loudspeakers
The anion FeO22-, and any of the salts (formally derived from the unknown ferrous acid) derived from it
the interstitial solid solution of carbon in body-centered cubic iron
a ferromagnetic compound of ferric oxide used in the construction of magnetic recording heads and media
A solid solution of one or more elements in body centered cubic iron Unless otherwise designated (for instance, as chromium ferrite), the solute is generally assumed to be carbon On some equilibrium diagrams, there are two ferrite regions separated by an austenite area The lower area is alpha ferrite-, the upper, delta ferrite If there is no designation, alpha ferrite is assumed
{i} amorphous hydroxide of iron (found in certain rocks); pure iron; substance containing iron
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Use on coaxial cables to reduce the radiation/EMI susceptibility to high frequency noise
The ferrite material is the key component of a circulator It is a ceramic material that interacts with the applied RF field depending on the level of stationary magnetic field across it When placed in a resonator, the RF fields form standing waves that are positioned to behave as a circulator
Most common magnet material composed of Barium or Strontium Ferrite; available as isotropic, anisotropic, hard ferrite or bonded type
The body-centred cubic crystalline phase of iron-based alloys
A special ferrous compound which has the property of retaining its magnetism after the magnetizing force has been removed
Crystal type of iron (magnetic), which is characterized by a cubic body centered lattice structure
body-centered cubic iron Also, iron and steel alloys that have the BCC crystal structure
The virtually pure form of iron existing below the lower critical temperature and characterized by a body-centered cubic lattice crystal structure It is magnetic and has very slight solid solubility for carbon
can Inexpensive electric motor type featuring ferrite field magnets, stamped steel case and carbon brushes
A ceramic material that exhibits low loss at high frequencies, and which contains iron oxide mixed with oxides or carbonates of one or more metals such as manganese, zinc, nickel or magnesium
(1) A solid solution of one or more elements in body-centered cubic iron Unless otherwise designated (for instance, as chromium ferrite) the solute is generally assumed to be carbon On some equilibrium diagrams, there are two ferrite regions separated by an austenite area The lower area is alpha ferrite; the upper, delta ferrite If there is no designation, alpha ferrite is assumed (2) In the field of magnetics, substances having the general formula: M++ O2+++ O3 The trivalent metal often being iron
A type of ceramic material having magnetic properties and consisting of a crystalline structure of ferric oxide and one or more metallic oxides, such as those of nickel or zinc
The anion FeO{2}[2-], and any of the salts (formally derived from the unknown ferrous acid) derived from it
One of the forms of pure metallic iron, having high magnetic permeability
A solid solution of one or more elements in the body-center-cubic phase of iron or steel
a solid solution in which alpha iron is the solvent
ferrite core
A magnetic core used in a computer core memory
ferrites
plural of ferrite
ferritic
Referring to iron content
ferritic
Magnetic stainless steels that have a low carbon content and contain chromium as the main alloying element, usually between 13% and 17% It is the second most widely used stainless steel Ferretic stainless steels are generally used in automotive trim and exhaust systems, hot water tanks, and interior architectural trim
ferritic
The second-largest class of stainless steel, constituting approximately 25% of stainless production
ferrite

    Silbentrennung

    fer·rite

    Türkische aussprache

    ferayt

    Aussprache

    /ˈferīt/ /ˈfɛraɪt/

    Etymologie

    () New Latin, from Latin ferrum 'iron' and suffix -ite, from Semitic (compare Phoenician barzel).
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