Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7921906 | Materials Chemistry and Physics | 2018 | 38 Pages |
Abstract
Four batches of cerium oxide powders (with nanocrystallite size of 6.9â¯nm-572â¯nm) were prepared from four precursor nanopowders by thermal decomposition of Ce-propionate and annealing in air between 250â¯Â°C-1200â¯Â°C for 10â¯min-240â¯min. Ceria formation reactions, structure, vibrational, luminescence and magnetic properties were investigated by differential scanning calorimetry, x-ray diffraction, electron microscopy, infrared spectroscopy, photoluminescence and SQUID. All the samples exhibit room temperature ferromagnetism, RTFM, (with coercivity, Hc, of 8â¯Oe - 121â¯Oe and saturation magnetization, Ms, of up to 6.7*10â3 emu/g) and a broad defect-related photoluminescence, PL, emission in the visible range. The samples derived from the same precursor show Ms proportional to the peak area of defect-related PL emission whereas this is not valid for the samples derived from the different precursors. An improvement of ferromagnetism and intensity of defect-related PL emission was observed when annealing the products in which nanocrystalline cerium oxide coexists with Ce - oxicarbonate traces, Ce2O2CO3. The experimental results were explained based on the following considerations: room temperature ferromagnetism was induced by the defective ceria with high concentration of oxygen vacancies generated by decomposition of Ce-propionate; oxygen vacancies of the starting precursor nanopowders could be redistributed (at the surfaces/grain boundaries, GBs) upon heating under conditions that promote an inert local environment; the decomposition of Ce2O2CO3 residues can provide an excess of oxygen vacancies at the nanoparticles surfaces or GBs, which can induce or enhance ferromagnetism; surfaces/GBs rather than bulk defects appear responsible for RTFM - this can explain the (often reported in literature) inconsistency between oxygen vacancies concentration and Ms.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Authors
V. Mihalache, M. Secu, J.C. Grivel,