| Literature DB >> 32629977 |
Alexander Omelyanchik1,2, María Salvador1,3, Franco D'Orazio4, Valentina Mameli5,6, Carla Cannas5,6, Dino Fiorani1, Anna Musinu5,6, Montserrat Rivas3, Valeria Rodionova2, Gaspare Varvaro1, Davide Peddis1,6,7.
Abstract
The effect of the annealing temperature Tann on the magnetic properties of cobalt ferrite nanoparticles embedded in an amorphous silica matrix (CoFe2O4/SiO2), synthesized by a sol-gel auto-combustion method, was investigated by magnetization and AC susceptibility measurements. For samples with 15% w/w nanoparticle concentration, the particle size increases from ~2.5 to ~7 nm, increasing Tann from 700 to 900 °C. The effective magnetic anisotropy constant (Keff) increases with decreasing Tann, due to the increase in the surface contribution. For a 5% w/w sample annealed at 900 °C, Keff is much larger (1.7 × 106 J/m3) than that of the 15% w/w sample (7.5 ×105 J/m3) annealed at 700 °C and showing comparable particle size. This indicates that the effect of the annealing temperature on the anisotropy is not only the control of the particle size but also on the core structure (i.e., cation distribution between the two spinel sublattices and degree of spin canting), strongly affecting the magnetocrystalline anisotropy. The results provide evidence that the magnetic anisotropy comes from a complex balance between core and surface contributions that can be controlled by thermal treatments.Entities:
Keywords: cobalt ferrite; magnetic anisotropy; magnetic nanoparticles
Year: 2020 PMID: 32629977 DOI: 10.3390/nano10071288
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076