Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 9 de 9
Filtrar
Mais filtros








Base de dados
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Nanoscale Adv ; 6(11): 2903-2918, 2024 May 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38817437

RESUMO

A series of exchange-coupled magnetic nanoparticles combining several magnetic phases in an onion-type structure were synthesized by performing a three-step seed-mediated growth process. Iron and cobalt precursors were alternatively decomposed in high-boiling-temperature solvents (288-310 °C) to successively grow CoO and Fe3-δO4 shells (the latter in three stages) on the surface of Fe3-δO4 seeds. The structure and chemical composition of these nanoparticles were investigated in depth by combining a wide panel of advanced techniques, such as scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), electron energy-loss spectroscopy-spectrum imaging (EELS-SI), 57Fe Mössbauer spectrometry, and X-ray circular magnetic dichroism (XMCD) techniques. The size of the nanoparticles increased progressively after each thermal decomposition step, but the crystal structure of core-shell nanoparticles was significantly modified during the growth of the second shell. Indeed, the antiferromagnetic CoO phase was progressively replaced by the CoFe2O4 ferrimagnet due to the concomitant processes of partial solubilization/crystallization and the interfacial cationic diffusion of iron. A much more complex chemical structure than that suggested by a simple size variation of the nanoparticles is thus proposed, namely Fe3-δO4@CoO-CoFe2O4@Fe3-δO4, where an intermediate Co-based layer was shown to progressively become a single, hybrid magnetic phase (attributed to proximity effects) with a reduction in the CoO amount. In turn, the dual exchange-coupling of this hybrid Co-based intermediate layer (with high anisotropy and ordering temperature) with the surrounding ferrite (core and outer shells) stabilized the particle moment well above room temperature. These effects allow for the production of Fe oxide-based magnetic nanoparticles with high effective anisotropy, thus revealing the potential of this strategy to design rare-earth-free permanent nanomagnets at room temperature.

2.
Small ; 20(10): e2304152, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37888807

RESUMO

The magnetic coupling of a set of SrFe12 O19 /CoFe2 O4 nanocomposites is investigated. Advanced electron microscopy evidences the structural coherence and texture at the interfaces of the nanostructures. The fraction of the lower anisotropy phase (CoFe2 O4 ) is tuned to assess the limits that define magnetically exchange-coupled interfaces by performing magnetic remanence, first-order reversal curves (FORCs), and relaxation measurements. By combining these magnetometry techniques and the structural and morphological information from X-ray diffraction, electron microscopy, and Mössbauer spectrometry, the exchange intergranular interaction is evidenced, and the critical thickness within which coupled interfaces have a uniform reversal unraveled.

3.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 12(15)2022 Aug 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35957092

RESUMO

Cloth used for facemask material has been coated with silver nanoparticles using an aerosol method that passes pure uncoated nanoparticles through the cloth and deposits them throughout the volume. The particles have been characterized by electron microscopy and have a typical diameter of 4 nm with the atomic structure of pure metallic silver presented as an assortment of single crystals and polycrystals. The particles adhere well to the cloth fibers, and the coating consists of individual nanoparticles at low deposition times, evolving to fully agglomerated assemblies in heavy coatings. The cloth was exposed to Usutu virus and murine norovirus particles in suspension and allowed to dry, following which, the infectious virus particles were rescued by soaking the cloth in culture media. It was found that up to 98% of the virus particles were neutralized by this contact with the silver nanoparticles for optimum deposition conditions. The best performance was obtained with agglomerated films and with polycrystalline nanoparticles. The work indicates that silver nanoparticles embedded in masks can neutralize the majority of virus particles that enter the mask and thus increase the opacity of masks to infectious viruses by up to a factor of 50. In addition, the majority of the virus particles released from the mask after use are non-infectious.

4.
Small ; 18(28): e2106762, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35689307

RESUMO

Dense systems of magnetic nanoparticles may exhibit dipolar collective behavior. However, two fundamental questions remain unsolved: i) whether the transition temperature may be affected by the particle anisotropy or it is essentially determined by the intensity of the interparticle dipolar interactions, and ii) what is the minimum ratio of dipole-dipole interaction (Edd ) to nanoparticle anisotropy (Kef V, anisotropy⋅volume) energies necessary to crossover from individual to collective behavior. A series of particle assemblies with similarly intense dipolar interactions but widely varying anisotropy is studied. The Kef  is tuned through different degrees of cobalt-doping in maghemite nanoparticles, resulting in a variation of nearly an order of magnitude. All the bare particle compacts display collective behavior, except the one made with the highest anisotropy particles, which presents "marginal" features. Thus, a threshold of Kef V/Edd  ≈ 130 to suppress collective behavior is derived, in good agreement with Monte Carlo simulations. This translates into a crossover value of ≈1.7 for the easily accessible parameter TMAX (interacting)/TMAX (non-interacting) (ratio of the peak temperatures of the zero-field-cooled magnetization curves of interacting and dilute particle systems), which is successfully tested against the literature to predict the individual-like/collective behavior of any given interacting particle assembly comprising relatively uniform particles.


Assuntos
Magnetismo , Nanopartículas , Anisotropia , Cobalto , Transição de Fase
5.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 11(11)2021 Oct 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34835568

RESUMO

The advantages of gas-phase synthesis of nanoparticles in terms of size control and flexibility in choice of materials is well known. There is increasing interest in synthesizing multi-element nanoparticles in order to optimize their performance in specific applications, and here, the flexibility of material choice is a key advantage. Mixtures of almost any solid materials can be manufactured and in the case of core-shell particles, there is independent control over core size and shell thickness. This review presents different methods of producing multi-element nanoparticles, including the use of multiple targets, alloy targets and in-line deposition methods to coat pre-formed cores. It also discusses the factors that produce alloy, core-shell or Janus morphologies and what is possible or not to synthesize. Some applications of multi-element nanoparticles in medicine will be described.

6.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 8(8): 2002683, 2021 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33898170

RESUMO

Enhancement of mechanical properties in self-assembled superstructures of magnetic nanoparticles is a new emerging aspect of their remarkable collective behavior. However, how magnetic interactions modulate mechanical properties is, to date, not fully understood. Through a comprehensive Monte Carlo investigation, this study demonstrates how the mechanical properties of self-assembled magnetic nanocubes can be controlled intrinsically by the nanoparticle magnetocrystalline anisotropy (MA), as well as by the superstructure shape anisotropy, without any need for changes in structural design (i.e., nanoparticle size, shape, and packing arrangement). A low MA-to-dipolar energy ratio, as found in iron oxide and permalloy systems, favors isotropic mechanical superstructure stabilization, whereas a high ratio yields magnetically blocked nanoparticle macrospins which can give rise to metastable superferromagnetism, as expected in cobalt ferrite simple cubic supercrystals. Such full parallel alignment of the particle moments is shown to induce mechanical anisotropy, where the superior high-strength axis can be remotely reconfigured by means of an applied magnetic field. The new concepts developed here pave the way for the experimental realization of smart magneto-micromechanical systems (based, e.g., on the permanent super-magnetostriction effect illustrated here) and inspire new design rules for applied functional materials.

7.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(22): 24895-24904, 2020 Jun 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32336084

RESUMO

While magnetic supports have been widely used to immobilize homogeneous catalysts in organic chemistry, this strategy has so far found very little application in photocatalysis. Indeed, magnetic supports are dark colored, and thus compete for photon absorption with photocatalysts themselves. We have developed a series of core-shell Fe(0)-silica nanoparticles as supports for immobilizing the photosensitizer Ru(bpy)32+, featuring various silica shell thicknesses-16-34 nm SiO2-on 9 nm Fe cores. The supports and the resulting photocatalytic systems were studied for their magnetic, optical, and catalytic properties in the context of the photooxidation of citronellol, and we found that thicker silica shells lead to higher catalytic activity. We correlated this effect as well as Ru(bpy)32+ fluorescence and singlet oxygen generation to the absorption properties of the supports. We were able to reuse our optimal system three times with minimal loss of activity and achieved turnover numbers largely surpassing the performance of homogeneous Ru(bpy)32+. This work highlights the role of material design in the conception of new supports for applications in heterogeneous photocatalysis.

8.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 7(3)2017 Mar 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28336895

RESUMO

Porous films of cobalt nanoparticles have been obtained by sputter gas aggregation and controllably oxidized by air annealing at 100 °C for progressively longer times (up to more than 1400 h). The magnetic properties of the samples were monitored during the process, with a focus on the exchange bias field. Air annealing proves to be a convenient way to control the Co/CoO ratio in the samples, allowing the optimization of the exchange bias field to a value above 6 kOe at 5 K. The occurrence of the maximum in the exchange bias field is understood in terms of the density of CoO uncompensated spins and their degree of pinning, with the former reducing and the latter increasing upon the growth of a progressively thicker CoO shell. Vertical shifts exhibited in the magnetization loops are found to correlate qualitatively with the peak in the exchange bias field, while an increase in vertical shift observed for longer oxidation times may be explained by a growing fraction of almost completely oxidized particles. The presence of a hummingbird-like form in magnetization loops can be understood in terms of a combination of hard (biased) and soft (unbiased) components; however, the precise origin of the soft phase is as yet unresolved.

9.
Phys Rev Lett ; 115(5): 057201, 2015 Jul 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26274435

RESUMO

Thermal activation tends to destroy the magnetic stability of small magnetic nanoparticles, with crucial implications for ultrahigh density recording among other applications. Here we demonstrate that low-blocking-temperature ferromagnetic (FM) Co nanoparticles (T(B)<70 K) become magnetically stable above 400 K when embedded in a high-Néel-temperature antiferromagnetic (AFM) NiO matrix. The origin of this remarkable T(B) enhancement is due to a magnetic proximity effect between a thin CoO shell (with low Néel temperature, T(N), and high anisotropy, K(AFM)) surrounding the Co nanoparticles and the NiO matrix (with high T(N) but low K(AFM)). This proximity effect yields an effective antiferromagnet with an apparent T(N) beyond that of bulk CoO, and an enhanced anisotropy compared to NiO. In turn, the Co core FM moment is stabilized against thermal fluctuations via core-shell exchange-bias coupling, leading to the observed T(B) increase. Mean-field calculations provide a semiquantitative understanding of this magnetic-proximity stabilization mechanism.

SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA