Abstract
A paper by Mi et al. [1] suggested that certain nano-sized hematite (α-Fe 2 O 3) particles had diamagnetic properties at room temperature. Since diamagnetic behavior is not a property normally attributed to hematite particles (hematite is generally regarded as a canted antiferromagnetic material at room temper-ature) we decided to test the validity of the suggestions in [1] by performing magnetic susceptibility and magnetic hysteresis measurements on a series of hematite nanoparticles with average sizes of 8 nm, 30 nm and 40 nm in di-ameter. We initially considered two possible explanations for the apparent diamagnetic behavior of the nanoparticles in [1]: either 1) the hematite nano-particles themselves exhibited this unusual diamagnetic behavior, or 2) the diamagnetic response was simply the signal created by a diamagnetic disper-sant that was overriding a weak positive magnetic susceptibility signal of the hematite nanoparticles. Our experiments strongly suggested the latter expla-nation that the apparent " diamagnetic " behavior seen in [1] was caused by a diamagnetic dispersant dominating the magnetic properties of the dispersed hematite nanoparticles.
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CITATION STYLE
Petrov, P. A., Ali, A., & Potter, D. K. (2017). Diamagnetic Behavior in Nanoparticle Hematite? Journal of Modern Physics, 08(07), 1013–1019. https://doi.org/10.4236/jmp.2017.87063
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