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Room Temperature Blocked Magnetic Nanoparticles Based on Ferrite Promoted by a Three-Step Thermal Decomposition Process
Author(s) -
Kevin Sartori,
Fadi Choueikani,
Alexandre Gloter,
Sylvie BéginColin,
Dario Taverna,
Benoît P. Pichon
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.9b03965
Subject(s) - thermal decomposition , nanoparticle , chemistry , magnetic nanoparticles , ferrite core , magnetic anisotropy , shell (structure) , ferrite (magnet) , magnet , anisotropy , nanotechnology , chemical engineering , coercivity , decomposition , nuclear magnetic resonance , electromagnetic coil , magnetization , magnetic field , condensed matter physics , composite material , materials science , organic chemistry , optics , physics , engineering , quantum mechanics , electrical engineering
Exchange coupled nanoparticles that combine hard and soft magnetic phases are very promising to enhance the effective magnetic anisotropy while preserving sizes below 20 nm. However, the core-shell structure is usually insufficient to produce rare earth-free ferro(i)magnetic blocked nanoparticles at room temperature. We report on onion-type magnetic nanoparticles prepared by a three-step seed mediated growth based on the thermal decomposition method. The core@shell@shell structure consists of a core and an external shell of Fe 3-δ O 4 separated by an intermediate Co-doped ferrite shell. The double exchange coupling at both core@shell and shell@shell interfaces results in such an increased of the magnetic anisotropy energy, that onion-type nanoparticles of 16 nm mainly based on iron oxide are blocked at room temperature. We envision that these results are very appealing for potential applications based on permanent magnets.

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