| Literature DB >> 23365798 |
Abdel-Aziz El Mel1, Jean-Luc Duvail, Eric Gautron, Wei Xu, Chang-Hwan Choi, Benoit Angleraud, Agnès Granier, Pierre-Yves Tessier.
Abstract
We report on the synthesis and magnetic characterization of ultralong (1 cm) arrays of highly ordered coaxial nanowires with nickel cores and graphene stacking shells (also known as metal-filled carbon nanotubes). Carbon-containing nickel nanowires are first grown on a nanograted surface by magnetron sputtering. Then, a post-annealing treatment favors the metal-catalyzed crystallization of carbon into stacked graphene layers rolled around the nickel cores. The observed uniaxial magnetic anisotropy field oriented along the nanowire axis is an indication that the shape anisotropy dominates the dipolar coupling between the wires. We further show that the thermal treatment induces a decrease in the coercivity of the nanowire arrays. This reflects an enhancement of the quality of the nickel nanowires after annealing attributed to a decrease of the roughness of the nickel surface and to a reduction of the defect density. This new type of graphene-ferromagnetic-metal nanowire appears to be an interesting building block for spintronic applications.Entities:
Keywords: carbon; ferromagnetic; graphene; nanofabrication; nanowires; nickel; phase separation
Year: 2012 PMID: 23365798 PMCID: PMC3556984 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.3.95
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Schematics of the carbon-containing nickel nanowire array before (left) and after (right) post-annealing for 1 h at 400 °C.
Figure 2SEM micrographs of the post-annealed carbon-containing nickel nanowires on silicon nanograted structures. Cross section (a) and plan (b) view.
Figure 3(a) TEM micrograph of a coaxial nanowire as prepared on a silicon nanograted structure. (b) High-resolution TEM micrograph showing the presence of several stacked graphene layers wrapping the nickel nanowire. (c) Selected-area electron diffraction pattern recorded on a single wire. The 002 reflection indicated in (c) is attributed to graphitic carbon.
Figure 4(a) Normalized hysteresis loops of the coaxial nanowire array measured at 300 K with an applied magnetic field parallel (black curve) and perpendicular (red curve) to the wire axis. Panel (b) is a magnified region of (a).
Summary of the magnetic characteristics recorded at 300 K for C–Ni nanowire arrays before and after thermal annealing at 400 °C.
| Sample | ||||
| As-grown C–Ni nanowires | 1550 | 3100 | 127 | 34 |
| Postannealed C–Ni nanowires | 1500 | 3100 | 32 | 21 |