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Simultaneous Individual and Dipolar Collective Properties in Binary Assemblies of Magnetic Nanoparticles

Authors :
Sanchez, Elena H.
Vasilakaki, Marianna
Lee, Su Seong
Normile, Peter S.
Muscas, Giuseppe
Murgia, Massimiliano
Andersson, Mikael S.
Singh, Gurvinder
Mathieu, Roland
Nordblad, Per
Ricci, Pier Carlo
Peddis, Davide
Trohidou, Kalliopi N.
Nogues, Josep
De Toro, Jose A.
Sanchez, Elena H.
Vasilakaki, Marianna
Lee, Su Seong
Normile, Peter S.
Muscas, Giuseppe
Murgia, Massimiliano
Andersson, Mikael S.
Singh, Gurvinder
Mathieu, Roland
Nordblad, Per
Ricci, Pier Carlo
Peddis, Davide
Trohidou, Kalliopi N.
Nogues, Josep
De Toro, Jose A.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Applications based on aggregates of magnetic nanoparticles are becoming increasingly widespread, ranging from hyperthermia to magnetic recording. However, although some uses require collective behavior, others need a more individual-like response, the conditions leading to either of these behaviors are still poorly understood. Here, we use nanoscale-uniform binary random dense mixtures with different proportions of oxide magnetic nanoparticles with low/high anisotropy as a valuable tool to explore the crossover from individual to collective behavior. Two different anisotropy scenarios have been studied in two series of binary compacts: M1, comprising maghemite (gamma-Fe2O3) nanoparticles of different sizes (9.0 nm/11.5 nm) with barely a factor of 2 between their anisotropy energies, and M2, mixing equally sized pure maghemite (low-anisotropy) and Co-doped maghemite (high-anisotropy) nanoparticles with a large difference in anisotropy energy (ratio > 8). Interestingly, while the M1 series exhibits collective behavior typical of strongly coupled dipolar systems, the M2 series presents a more complex scenario where different magnetic properties resemble either "individual-like" or "collective", crucially emphasizing that the collective character must be ascribed to specific properties and not to the system as a whole. The strong differences between the two series offer new insight (systematically ratified by simulations) into the subtle interplay between dipolar interactions, local anisotropy and sample heterogeneity to determine the behavior of dense assemblies of magnetic nanoparticles.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1235257243
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021.acs.chemmater.9b03268