| Literature DB >> 28336895 |
Ricardo López Antón1, Juan A González2, Juan P Andrés3, Peter S Normile4, Jesús Canales-Vázquez5, Pablo Muñiz6, José M Riveiro7, José A De Toro8.
Abstract
Porous films of cobalt nanoparticles have been obtained by sputter gas aggregation and controllably oxidized by air annealing at 100 °C for progressively longer times (up to more than 1400 h). The magnetic properties of the samples were monitored during the process, with a focus on the exchange bias field. Air annealing proves to be a convenient way to control the Co/CoO ratio in the samples, allowing the optimization of the exchange bias field to a value above 6 kOe at 5 K. The occurrence of the maximum in the exchange bias field is understood in terms of the density of CoO uncompensated spins and their degree of pinning, with the former reducing and the latter increasing upon the growth of a progressively thicker CoO shell. Vertical shifts exhibited in the magnetization loops are found to correlate qualitatively with the peak in the exchange bias field, while an increase in vertical shift observed for longer oxidation times may be explained by a growing fraction of almost completely oxidized particles. The presence of a hummingbird-like form in magnetization loops can be understood in terms of a combination of hard (biased) and soft (unbiased) components; however, the precise origin of the soft phase is as yet unresolved.Entities:
Keywords: Co/CoO; core-shell nanoparticles; exchange bias; magnetic nanoparticles; magnetic properties
Year: 2017 PMID: 28336895 PMCID: PMC5388163 DOI: 10.3390/nano7030061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1(a) Hysteresis loops, recorded at 10 K after cooling from room temperature under an applied field of 50 kOe, measured in the as-deposited sample (ad) and after air-annealing at 100 °C for different (cumulative) times; (b) Example of one of the fits to the hummingbird-like loops (that of the 456 h annealed sample), obtained using a combination of a hard and a soft FM phase (after correcting the data for vertical shift).
Figure 2Annealing time dependence of the exchange bias and coercive fields, extracted from both the as-measured loops (upper panel, Figure 2a) and of the hard component extracted from the fits as exemplified in Figure 1b (lower panel, Figure 2b), as well as of the vertical shift (blue squares). The lines are guides for the eye.
Figure 3Annealing time dependence of the saturation moment of the hard and soft components of the hysteresis loop.
Figure 4(a) Hysteresis loops of the sample annealed for 456 h recorded at different temperatures after field-cooling from 300 K (only the data over a limited H range are presented) and (b) zero-field-cooled and field-cooled magnetization curves measured in the same sample in an applied field of 500 Oe.
Figure 5Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) micrograph of the nanoparticle film after annealing for 6 h.