Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7923144 | Materials Chemistry and Physics | 2015 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Powder samples containing high purity nickel nanoparticles (NPs) were prepared by hydrothermal method from Ni(II) chloride hexahydrate (NiCl2·6H2O) under the presence of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) with different concentrations between 5 and 25 mol/L. The synthesis of the NPs occurs through chemical reduction at relatively low temperature (140 °C). The Ni NPs have a face-centred cubic (fcc) crystal structure with a lattice parameter value close to that of pure Ni (a = 3.52 Ã
). The average crystallite size determined from x-ray diffraction is around 20Â nm, except for the sample synthesized under the highest NaOH concentration (25Â mol/L), which has the largest average size (>30Â nm). The powder morphology at the sub-micrometre length scale looks like agglomerates of Ni-NPs that drastically changes their shape depending on the NaOH concentration, from flower (5Â mol/L) to a dendritic-like (25Â mol/L). All the samples are ferromagnetic at room temperature with saturation magnetization values between 50 and 52emu/g, and a coercive field that increases with the NaOH concentration from around 135 (5Â mol/L) up to 180Oe (25Â mol/L).
Related Topics
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Authors
A. Bouremana, A. Guittoum, M. Hemmous, D. MartÃnez-Blanco, Pedro Gorria, J.A. Blanco, N. Benrekaa,