Iron nanoparticle assemblies: Structures and magnetic behavior

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Abstract

Self-assembly of spherical, surfactant-coated nanoparticles is discussed, an examples are presented to demonstrate the variety of structures that can be formed, and the conditions that lead to them. The effect of the concentration on the magnetic properties is then examined for 8.5 nm Fe nanoparticles. Dilute dispersions, arrays formed by evaporation of the dispersions, and nanoparticle crystals grown by slow diffusion of a poorly coordinating solvent were characterized by zero field-cooled magnetization, remanent hysteresis loop, and magnetic relaxation measurements. The average spacing between the particles was determined from a combination of transmission electron microscopy and small angle x-ray scattering. In the arrays the spacing was 2.5 nm between the edges of the particle cores, while in the nanoparticle crystals the particles were more tightly packed, with a separation of 1.1 nm. The reduced separation increased the magnetostatic interaction strength in the nanoparticle crystals, which showed distinctly different behavior in the rate of approach to saturation in the remanent hysteresis loops, and in the faster rate of time-dependent magnetic relaxation. © 2005 IOP Publishing Ltd.

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APA

Farrell, D., Cheng, Y., Kan, S., Sachan, M., Ding, Y., Majetich, S. A., & Yang, L. (2005). Iron nanoparticle assemblies: Structures and magnetic behavior. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 17, pp. 185–195). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/17/1/026

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