Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1799682 Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials 2014 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Single-phase of Sr0.5Co0.5Fe2O4 was investigated using XRD and HRTEM.•The hyperfine interactions and distributions of Fe3+ ions are deduced.•VSMs were used for magnetization measurements from 2 K to 300 K.•Kneller׳s law and modified Bloch׳s law were applied in the studies.•Evidence of exchange bias (core/shell nanoparticle) has been investigated.

The nanoparticle Sr0.5Co0.5Fe2O4 powder was produced via glycol-thermal process from high-purity metal chlorides at a low reaction temperature of 200 °C. The phase identification of the as-synthesized powder reveals cubic spinel structure with an average crystallite size of 8 nm. Room-temperature Mössbauer spectra for the as-synthesized sample and samples annealed at different temperatures show different local environments of tetrahedral and octahedral coordinated iron cations. Magnetic properties of the as-synthesized sample and samples annealed at 300, 400, 450, 500, 600, 700 and 800 °C have been investigated using a vibrating sample magnetometer at room-temperature in applied magnetic fields of up to about 1.4 T. A substantial increase in coercive field at 300 K from 0.28 kOe to 2.897 kOe was obtained for the as-synthesized and annealed sample at 800 °C. Magnetic field dependence of magnetization curves measured on a mini-cryogen free VTI system operating at a base temperature of 2 K in magnetic fields of up to 5 T have been investigated. The variation of the saturation magnetization as a function of temperature follows modified Bloch׳s law. Coercive field increased from about 0.28 kOe and 1.04 kOe at 300 K to 11.14 kOe and 10.43 kOe at 2 K for the as-synthesized sample and sample annealed at 500 °C, respectively because of spin-freezing. The effect of exchange bias and Kneller׳s law are used to account for the temperature dependence of coercive fields.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Condensed Matter Physics
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