Soft magnetic composites are enabling lighter, smarter, and more efficient motors—without the constraints of traditional materials.
Manufacturers of products as wide ranging as e-mobility vehicles, drones, HVAC, industrial automation, hand tools, lawn and garden equipment, and more are demanding smarter, lighter, more efficient motor solutions. As the use of electric motors evolves, one material stands out for its ability to transform motor topologies: soft magnetic composites (SMCs).
SMCs are redefining what’s possible in electric motor design, enabling innovative topologies like axial flux, yokeless axial flux, and trapezoidal radial flux. The real breakthroughs emerge, however, when these materials are paired with conventional laminations to create hybrid stators that elevate efficiency, reduce weight, and unlock new design features previously considered impractical or too costly.
Let’s dive in and see how this approach is reshaping what motors can do.
Traditional radial flux motors, which are built around stamped electrical steel laminations, were defined by the limitations of a different era. While they’ve served well, their 2D geometry constraints now stand in the way of progress, especially in high frequency, compact, or three-dimensional flux designs, where performance demands are outpacing legacy solutions. Soft magnetic composites are reshaping the rules, offering a bold alternative to traditional designs. Made from iron powder particles coated with an insulating layer, SMCs enable 3D magnetic flux, reduce eddy current losses, and allow near-net shape manufacturing.
Despite their advantages, SMCs also bring trade-offs such as lower mechanical strength and heat dissipation limitations. Understanding these strengths and weaknesses is critical as we explore how new topologies— especially axial flux, yokeless axial flux, and trapezoidal radial flux motors—can be optimized using SMCs.
In axial flux motors, the magnetic flux flows parallel to the axis of rotation—unlike the more common radial flux motors where it flows perpendicularly. This shift in direction opens up a world of design efficiencies:
For axial flux motors, 3D stator shaping isn’t just an advantage; it’s a performance enabler. SMCs make this possible by supporting the following innovations:
To take advantage of the benefits of SMCs, designers of axial flux motors must also address these limitations:
Yokeless axial flux motors take the axial flux architecture a step further by eliminating the stator yoke. This design allows magnetic flux to travel directly between opposing stator teeth through the rotor, reducing core material usage, lowering losses, and enabling a more compact, lightweight motor that’s ideal for next-generation applications.
Yokeless designs amplify the need for careful engineering:
Real-world inspiration: Koenigsegg’s “Dark Matter” motor—a yokeless axial-radial hybrid—uses SMCs to deliver 800 hp from just 40 kg of motor mass.
The real magic often comes from combining SMCs with traditional laminated steel—a hybrid approach that balances innovation with practical engineering. These hybrids provide the following advantages:
Scaling these ideas, however, requires smart hybridization strategies, which we’ll cover in Part 2 of this series. There, we’ll explore how to make large, complex SMC parts manufacturable through modular designs—and how customers like Koenigsegg and niche aerospace programs are proving that the impossible is becoming possible.
Topologies like axial flux, yokeless axial flux, and trapezoidal radial flux motor concepts offer revolutionary performance, but they demand new design thinking. Soft magnetic composites open up this world, but only when their unique advantages are fully utilized and any potential limitations are minimized or eliminated with sound engineering designs. At Horizon Technology, we don’t just manufacture SMC parts; we collaborate with engineers to solve their hardest design problems.
The question we leave you with is this: What would your motor look like if traditional limitations no longer applied?