Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1602168 Intermetallics 2006 4 Pages PDF
Abstract
Thin films (50 nm) of Fe100−xPdx and Fe100−xMnx (x=20 and 50) were deposited by laser ablation on a Si wafer and studied by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and conversion electron Mössbauer spectroscopy (CEMS). In all cases, the XRD patterns of the target surface before and after ablation show a congruent transfer of ablated material. For the Fe80Pd20 thin film, XRD spectra show the formation of FePd, iron, Pd oxide and traces of hematite in the ablated film. Complementary information obtained by CEMS indicates the presence of an upper 50-nm thick surface layer of hematite in the deposited film. Fe50Pd50 phase was observed by CEMS and a Pd oxide component was identified by XRD, along with traces of hematite. In the case of Fe80Mn20, the CEMS spectrum is consistent with the occurrence of the antiferromagnetic FeMn phase and the XRD pattern also shows the presence of Fe in the structure. For the system Fe50Mn50, we obtain by CEMS an antiferromagnetic phase of FeMn and by XRD we trace the presence of nanohematite and in-depth iron. For x=20 in both iron-rich systems investigated, we observe the segregation of iron with subsequent conversion to hematite. The study shows that the stoichiometry of the compounds plays a decisive role in determining their structural and magnetic properties.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Metals and Alloys
Authors
, , ,