Thermal Decomposition Synthesis of Iron Oxide Nanoparticles with Diminished Magnetic Dead Layer by Controlled Addition of Oxygen.
Mythreyi Unni,Amanda M. Uhl, Shehaab Savliwala, Benjamin H. Savitzky, Rohan Dhavalikar, Nicolas Garraud, David P Arnold, Lena F. Kourkoutis, Jennifer S. Andrew, and Carlos Rinaldi
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Decades of research focused on size and shape control of iron oxide
nanoparticles have led to methods of synthesis that afford excellent
control over physical size and shape but comparatively poor control over
magnetic properties. Popular synthesis methods based on thermal
decomposition of organometallic precursors in the absence of oxygen have
yielded particles with mixed iron oxide phases, crystal defects, and
poorer than expected magnetic properties, including the existence of a
thick “magnetically dead layer” experimentally evidenced by a magnetic
diameter significantly smaller than the physical diameter. Here, we show
how single-crystalline iron oxide nanoparticles with few defects and
similar physical and magetic diameter distributions can be obtained by
introducing molecular oxygen as one of the reactive species in the
thermal decomposition synthesis. This is achieved without the need for
any postsynthesis oxidation or thermal annealing. These results address a
significant challenge in the synthesis of nanoparticles with
predictable magnetic properties and could lead to advances in
applications of magnetic nanoparticles. |
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