Ferromagnetism as a universal feature of nanoparticles of the otherwise nonmagnetic oxides
Physical Review B 74(16)
Article 2006 English
Authors
AS
A. Sundaresan
RB
R. Bhargavi
NR
N. Rangarajan
Abstract
1 min read
Room-temperature ferromagnetism has been observed in nanoparticles $(7--30\phantom{\rule{0.3em}{0ex}}\mathrm{nm}\phantom{\rule{0.2em}{0ex}}\mathrm{diam})$ of nonmagnetic oxides such as ${\mathrm{CeO}}_{2}$, ${\mathrm{Al}}_{2}{\mathrm{O}}_{3}$, $\mathrm{ZnO}$, ${\mathrm{In}}_{2}{\mathrm{O}}_{3}$, and ${\mathrm{SnO}}_{2}$. The saturated magnetic moments in ${\mathrm{CeO}}_{2}$ and ${\mathrm{Al}}_{2}{\mathrm{O}}_{3}$ nanoparticles are comparable to those observed in transition-metal-doped wideband semiconducting oxides. The other oxide nanoparticles show somewhat lower values of magnetization but with a clear hysteretic behavior. Conversely, the bulk samples obtained by sintering the nanoparticles at high temperatures in air or oxygen became diamagnetic. As there were no magnetic impurities present, we assume that the origin of ferromagnetism may be the exchange interactions between localized electron spin moments resulting from oxygen vacancies at the surfaces of nanoparticles. We suggest that ferromagnetism may be a universal characteristic of nanoparticles of metal oxides.
Johan Gustafson, Andrea Resta, Anders Mikkelsen, Rasmus Westerström, J. N. Andersen, Edvin Lundgren, Jonas Weissenrieder, Michael Schmid, П. Варга, N. Kasper, X. Torrelles, S. Ferrer, Florian Mittendorfer, Kresse Georg
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