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Dive into the research topics where Alexander Kovacs is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander Kovacs.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2015

Micromagnetic simulation of exchange coupled ferri-/ferromagnetic composite in bit patterned media

Alexander Kovacs; Phillip Wohlhüter; Eugenie Kirk; Dennis Nissen; Patrick Matthes; L. J. Heyderman; M. Albrecht; T. Schrefl

Ferri-/ferromagnetic exchange coupled composites are promising candidates for bit patterned media because of the ability to control the magnetic properties of the ferrimagnet by its composition. A micromagnetic model for the bilayer system is presented where we also incorporate the microstructural features of both layers. Micromagnetic finite element simulations are performed to investigate the magnetization reversal behaviour of such media. By adding the exchange coupled ferrimagnet to the ferromagnet, the switching field could be reduced by up to 40% and also the switching field distribution is narrowed. To reach these significant improvements, an interface exchange coupling strength of 2 mJ/m2 is required.


Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials | 2012

Self-organizing magnetic beads for biomedical applications ∗

Markus Gusenbauer; Alexander Kovacs; Franz Reichel; Lukas Exl; Simon Bance; Harald Özelt; T. Schrefl

Abstract In the field of biomedicine magnetic beads are used for drug delivery and to treat hyperthermia. Here we propose to use self-organized bead structures to isolate circulating tumor cells using lab-on-chip technologies. Typically blood flows past microposts functionalized with antibodies for circulating tumor cells. Creating these microposts with interacting magnetic beads makes it possible to tune the geometry in size, position and shape. We developed a simulation tool that combines micromagnetics and discrete particle dynamics, in order to design micropost arrays made of interacting beads. The simulation takes into account the viscous drag of the blood flow, magnetostatic interactions between the magnetic beads and gradient forces from external aligned magnets. We developed a particle–particle particle–mesh method for effective computation of the magnetic force and torque acting on the particles.


AIP Advances | 2017

Nonlinear conjugate gradient methods in micromagnetics

Johann Fischbacher; Alexander Kovacs; T. Schrefl; Lukas Exl; J. Fidler; Dieter Suess; Noritsugu Sakuma; Masao Yano; A. Kato; Tetsuya Shoji; Akira Manabe

Conjugate gradient methods for energy minimization in micromagnetics are compared. The comparison of analytic results with numerical simulation shows that standard conjugate gradient method may fail to produce correct results. A method that restricts the step length in the line search is introduced, in order to avoid this problem. When the step length in the line search is controlled, conjugate gradient techniques are a fast and reliable way to compute the hysteresis properties of permanent magnets. The method is applied to investigate demagnetizing effects in NdFe12 based permanent magnets. The reduction of the coercive field by demagnetizing effects is μ0ΔH = 1.4 T at 450 K.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

On the limits of coercivity in permanent magnets

Johann Fischbacher; Alexander Kovacs; Markus Gusenbauer; T. Schrefl; Lukas Exl; D. Givord; Nora Dempsey; Gergely T. Zimanyi; Michael Winklhofer; G. Hrkac; R.W. Chantrell; Noritsugu Sakuma; Masao Yano; A. Kato; Tetsuya Shoji; Akira Manabe

The maximum coercivity that can be achieved for a given hard magnetic alloy is estimated by computing the energy barrier for the nucleation of a reversed domain in an idealized microstructure without any structural defects and without any soft magnetic secondary phases. For Sm1–zZrz(Fe1–yCoy)12–xTix based alloys, which are considered an alternative to Nd2Fe14B magnets with a lower rare-earth content, the coercive field of a small magnetic cube is reduced to 60% of the anisotropy field at room temperature and to 50% of the anisotropy field at elevated temperature (473 K). This decrease of the coercive field is caused by misorientation, demagnetizing fields, and thermal fluctuations.


JOM | 2015

Thermal Activation in Permanent Magnets

Simon Bance; Johann Fischbacher; Alexander Kovacs; Franz Reichel; T. Schrefl

The coercive field of permanent magnets decays with temperature. At non-zero temperatures, the system can overcome a finite energy barrier through thermal fluctuations. Using finite element micromagnetic simulations, we quantify this effect, which reduces coercivity in addition to the decrease of the coercive field associated with the temperature dependence of the anisotropy field, and validate the method through comparison with existing experimental data.


Physica B-condensed Matter | 2014

Guided self-assembly of magnetic beads for biomedical applications

Markus Gusenbauer; Ha Nguyen; Franz Reichel; Lukas Exl; Simon Bance; Johann Fischbacher; Harald Özelt; Alexander Kovacs; Martin Brandl; T. Schrefl

Abstract Micromagnetic beads are widely used in biomedical applications for cell separation, drug delivery, and hyperthermia cancer treatment. Here we propose to use self-organized magnetic bead structures which accumulate on fixed magnetic seeding points to isolate circulating tumor cells. The analysis of circulating tumor cells is an emerging tool for cancer biology research and clinical cancer management including the detection, diagnosis and monitoring of cancer. Microfluidic chips for isolating circulating tumor cells use either affinity, size or density capturing methods. We combine multiphysics simulation techniques to understand the microscopic behavior of magnetic beads interacting with soft magnetic accumulation points used in lab-on-chip technologies. Our proposed chip technology offers the possibility to combine affinity and size capturing with special antibody-coated bead arrangements using a magnetic gradient field created by Neodymium Iron Boron permanent magnets. The multiscale simulation environment combines magnetic field computation, fluid dynamics and discrete particle dynamics.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2014

Numerical optimization of writer and media for bit patterned magnetic recording

Alexander Kovacs; M. E. Schabes; T. Schrefl

In this work, we present a micromagnetic study of the performance potential of bit-patterned (BP) magnetic recording media via joint optimization of the design of the media and of the magnetic write heads. Because the design space is large and complex, we developed a novel computational framework suitable for parallel implementation on compute clusters. Our technique combines advanced global optimization algorithms and finite-element micromagnetic solvers. Targeting data bit densities of 4 Tb/in2, we optimize designs for centered, staggered, and shingled BP writing. The magnetization dynamics of the switching of the exchange-coupled composite BP islands of the media is treated micromagnetically. Our simulation framework takes into account not only the dynamics of on-track errors but also the thermally induced adjacent-track erasure. With co-optimized write heads, the results show superior performance of shingled BP magnetic recording where we identify two particular designs achieving write bit-error rates...


Journal of Physics D | 2018

Micromagnetics of rare-earth efficient permanent magnets

Johann Fischbacher; Alexander Kovacs; Markus Gusenbauer; Lukas Exl; Simon Bance; T. Schrefl

The development of permanent magnets containing less or no rare-earth elements is linked to profound knowledge of the coercivity mechanism. Prerequisites for a promising permanent magnet material are a high spontaneous magnetization and a sufficiently high magnetic anisotropy. In addition to the intrinsic magnetic properties the microstructure of the magnet plays a significant role in establishing coercivity. The influence of the microstructure on coercivity, remanence, and energy density product can be understood by {using} micromagnetic simulations. With advances in computer hardware and numerical methods, hysteresis curves of magnets can be computed quickly so that the simulations can readily provide guidance for the development of permanent magnets. The potential of rare-earth reduced and free permanent magnets is investigated using micromagnetic simulations. The results show excellent hard magnetic properties can be achieved in grain boundary engineered NdFeB, rare-earth magnets with a ThMn12 structure, Co-based nano-wires, and L10-FeNi provided that the magnets microstructure is optimized.


Scripta Materialia | 2017

Searching the weakest link: Demagnetizing fields and magnetization reversal in permanent magnets

Johann Fischbacher; Alexander Kovacs; Lukas Exl; J. Kühnel; E. Mehofer; H. Sepehri-Amin; T. Ohkubo; K. Hono; T. Schrefl

Abstract Magnetization reversal in permanent magnets occurs by the nucleation and expansion of reversed domains. Micromagnetic theory offers the possibility to localize the spots within the complex structure of the magnet where magnetization reversal starts. We compute maps of the local nucleation field in a Nd2Fe14B permanent magnet using a model order reduction approach. Considering thermal fluctuations in numerical micromagnetics we can also quantify the reduction of the coercive field due to thermal activation. However, the major reduction of the coercive field is caused by the soft magnetic grain boundary phases and misorientation if there is no surface damage.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2016

Switching field distribution of exchange coupled ferri-/ferromagnetic composite bit patterned media

Alexander Kovacs; Johann Fischbacher; Patrick Matthes; Eugenie Kirk; Phillip Wohlhüter; L. J. Heyderman; M. Albrecht; T. Schrefl

We investigate the switching field distribution and the resulting bit error rate of exchange coupled ferri-/ferromagnetic bilayer island arrays by micromagnetic simulations. Using islands with varying microstructure and anisotropic properties, the intrinsic switching field distribution is computed. The dipolar contribution to the switching field distribution is obtained separately by using a model of a triangular patterned island array resembling 1.4 Tb/in2 bit patterned media. Both contributions are computed for different thicknesses of the soft exchange coupled ferrimagnet and also for ferromagnetic single phase FePt islands. A bit patterned media with a bilayer structure of FeGd( 5 nm)/FePt( 5 nm) shows a bit error rate of 10−4 with a write field of 1.16 T.

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T. Schrefl

Danube University Krems

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Simon Bance

St. Pölten University of Applied Sciences

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Franz Reichel

St. Pölten University of Applied Sciences

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M. Albrecht

University of Augsburg

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