Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1488608 | Materials Research Bulletin | 2014 | 8 Pages |
•Iron–iron oxides/silica composites are synthesized by long term dry ball-milling.•Bcc iron and α-quartz powders are used as precursors.•Surface effects enhance coercivity in iron/silica nanocomposites.•In spite of their small size, about 10 nm, iron particles are ferromagnetic.•Ferro and superparamagnetic particles are found in maghemite/silica composites.
Iron oxide/SiO2 nanocomposites are synthesized by dry ball-milling a mixture of bcc Fe and α-quartz powders for prolonged times. A sequence of nanocomposites is obtained, with small magnetic particles dispersed in a non magnetic, amorphous matrix. The powders are characterized by X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy. The magnetic hysteresis properties are investigated in the range 50–300 K. After 120 h milling, deformed, non-spherical, α-Fe nanocrystallites of about 10 nm in size and very few small (<10 nm) maghemite particles are found. At room temperature, iron particles are ferromagnetic and a large effective magnetic anisotropy is estimated, which is mainly attributed to surface effects. Between 160 and 200 h milling, maghemite nanoparticles are observed while after 220 h grinding, hematite phase appears; after 340 h milling, the sample consists of ferromagnetic hematite particles with a broad size distribution (5–50 nm) embedded in an amorphous matrix.
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