The thermal relaxation of macrospins in a strongly interacting thin film of spinel-phase iron oxide nanocrystals (NCs) is probed by vibrating sample magnetometry (VSM). Thin films are fabricated by depositing FeO/Fe 3O 4 core-shell NCs by electrophoretic deposition (EPD), followed by sintering at 400°C. Sintering transforms the core-shell structure to a uniform spinel phase, which effectively increases the magnetic moment per NC. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) confirms a large packing density and a reduced inter-particle separation in comparison with colloidal assemblies. At an applied field of 25 Oe, the superparamagnetic blocking temperature is T BSP ≈ 348 K, which is much larger than the Néel-Brown approximation of T BSP ≈ 210 K. The enhanced value of T BSP is attributed to strong dipole-dipole interactions and local exchange coupling between NCs. The field dependence of the blocking temperature, T BSP(H), is characterized by a monotonically decreasing function, which is in agreement with recent theoretical models of interacting macrospins. © 2010 The Author(s).
CITATION STYLE
Kavich, D. W., Hasan, S. A., Mahajan, S. V., Park, J. H., & Dickerson, J. H. (2010). Field Dependence of the Spin Relaxation Within a Film of Iron Oxide Nanocrystals Formed via Electrophoretic Deposition. Nanoscale Research Letters, 5(10), 1540–1545. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11671-010-9674-2
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