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XMCD and XMCD‐PEEM Studies on Magnetic‐Field‐Assisted Self‐Assembled 1D Nanochains of Spherical Ferrite Particles
Author(s) -
Zhang Wen,
Wong Ping Kwan Johnny,
Zhang Dong,
Yue Jinjin,
Kou Zhaoxia,
van der Laan Gerrit,
Scholl Andreas,
Zheng JianGuo,
Lu Zuhong,
Zhai Ya
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.201701265
Subject(s) - materials science , magnetic circular dichroism , magnetic field , photoemission electron microscopy , magnetic force microscope , condensed matter physics , magnetic domain , ferrite (magnet) , nanotechnology , single domain , chemical physics , magnetization , optics , electron microscope , composite material , spectral line , chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , astronomy
Quasi‐1D nanochains of spherical magnetic ferrite particles with a homogeneous particle size of ≈200 nm and a micrometer‐sized chain length are fabricated via a self‐assembly method under an external magnetic field. This assisting magnetic field ( H assist ), applied during synthesis, significantly modifies the distribution of the Fe 2+ O h , Fe 3+ T d , and Fe 3+ O h cations in the chains, as demonstrated by X‐ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) combined with theoretical analysis. This provides direct evidence of the nontrivial role of external synthetic conditions for defining the crystal chemistry of nanoscale ferrites and in turn their magnetic properties, providing an extra degree of freedom for intentional control over the performances of 1D magnetic nanodevices for various applications. Magnetic imaging, performed via XMCD in photoemission electron microscopy, further shows the possibility of creating and trapping a series of adjacent magnetic domain walls in a single chain, suggesting that there is great application potential for these nanochains in 1D magnetic nanodevices, as determined by field‐ or current‐driven domain wall motions. Practical control over the magnetic properties of the nanochains is also achieved by extrinsic dopants of cobalt and zinc, which are observed to occupy the ferrite ionic sites in a selective manner.