21 research outputs found
Longitudinal domain wall formation in elongated assemblies of ferromagnetic nanoparticles
Through evaporation of dense colloids of ferromagnetic ~13 nm ε-Co particles onto carbon substrates, anisotropic magnetic dipolar interactions can support formation of elongated particle structures with aggregate thicknesses of 100–400 nm and lengths of up to some hundred microns. Lorenz microscopy and electron holography reveal collective magnetic ordering in these structures. However, in contrast to continuous ferromagnetic thin films of comparable dimensions, domain walls appear preferentially as longitudinal, i.e., oriented parallel to the long axis of the nanoparticle assemblies. We explain this unusual domain structure as the result of dipolar interactions and shape anisotropy, in the absence of inter-particle exchange coupling
Anisotropic Superparamagnetism of Monodispersive Cobalt-Platinum Nanocrystals
Based on the high-temperature organometallic route (Sun et al. Science 287,
1989 (2000)), we have synthesized powders containing CoPt_3 single crystals
with mean diameters of 3.3(2) nm and 6.0(2) nm and small log-normal widths
sigma=0.15(1). In the entire temperature range from 5 K to 400 K, the
zero-field cooled susceptibility chi(T) displays significant deviations from
ideal superparamagnetism. Approaching the Curie temperature of 450(10) K, the
deviations arise from the (mean-field) type reduction of the ferromagnetic
moments, while below the blocking temperature T_b, chi(T) is suppressed by the
presence of energy barriers, the distributions of which scale with the particle
volumes obtained from transmission electron microscopy (TEM). This indication
for volume anisotropy is supported by scaling analyses of the shape of the
magnetic absorption chi''(T,omega) which reveal distribution functions for the
barriers being also consistent with the volume distributions observed by TEM.
Above 200 K, the magnetization isotherms M(H,T) display Langevin behavior
providing 2.5(1) mu_B per CoPt_3 in agreement with reports on bulk and thin
film CoPt_3. The non-Langevin shape of the magnetization curves at lower
temperatures is for the first time interpreted as anisotropic
superparamagnetism by taking into account an anisotropy energy of the
nanoparticles E_A(T). Using the magnitude and temperature variation of E_A(T),
the mean energy barriers and 'unphysical' small switching times of the
particles obtained from the analyses of chi''(T,omega) are explained. Below T_b
hysteresis loops appear and are quantitatively described by a blocking model,
which also ignores particle interactions, but takes the size distributions from
TEM and the conventional field dependence of E_A into account.Comment: 12 pages with 10 figures and 1 table. Version accepted for
publication in Phys. Rev. B . Two-column layou
Thermodynamics of Dipolar Chain Systems
The thermodynamics of a quantum system of layers containing perpendicularly
oriented dipolar molecules is studied within an oscillator approximation for
both bosonic and fermionic species. The system is assumed to be built from
chains with one molecule in each layer. We consider the effects of the
intralayer repulsion and quantum statistical requirements in systems with more
than one chain. Specifically, we consider the case of two chains and solve the
problem analytically within the harmonic Hamiltonian approach which is accurate
for large dipole moments. The case of three chains is calculated numerically.
Our findings indicate that thermodynamic observables, such as the heat
capacity, can be used to probe the signatures of the intralayer interaction
between chains. This should be relevant for near future experiments on polar
molecules with strong dipole moments.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, final versio
Facile Hydrogen Evolution Reaction on WO3Nanorods
Tungsten trioxide nanorods have been generated by the thermal decomposition (450 °C) of tetrabutylammonium decatungstate. The synthesized tungsten trioxide (WO3) nanorods have been characterized by XRD, Raman, SEM, TEM, HRTEM and cyclic voltammetry. High resolution transmission electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction analysis showed that the synthesized WO3nanorods are crystalline in nature with monoclinic structure. The electrochemical experiments showed that they constitute a better electrocatalytic system for hydrogen evolution reaction in acid medium compared to their bulk counterpart
Dipolar Magnetism in Ordered and Disordered Low-Dimensional Nanoparticle Assemblies
Magnetostatic (dipolar) interactions between nanoparticles promise to open new ways to design nanocrystalline magnetic materials and devices if the collective magnetic properties can be controlled at the nanoparticle level. Magnetic dipolar interactions are sufficiently strong to sustain magnetic order at ambient temperature in assemblies of closely-spaced nanoparticles with magnetic moments of ≥ 100 μB. Here we use electron holography with sub-particle resolution to reveal the correlation between particle arrangement and magnetic order in self-assembled 1D and quasi-2D arrangements of 15 nm cobalt nanoparticles. In the initial states, we observe dipolar ferromagnetism, antiferromagnetism and local flux closure, depending on the particle arrangement. Surprisingly, after magnetic saturation, measurements and numerical simulations show that overall ferromagnetic order exists in the present nanoparticle assemblies even when their arrangement is completely disordered. Such direct quantification of the correlation between topological and magnetic order is essential for the technological exploitation of magnetic quasi-2D nanoparticle assemblies
Problems and challenges in the development and validation of human cell-based assays to determine nanoparticle-induced immunomodulatory effects
Background: With the increasing use of nanomaterials, the need for methods and assays to examine their immunosafety is becoming urgent, in particular for nanomaterials that are deliberately administered to human subjects (as in the case of nanomedicines). To obtain reliable results, standardised in vitro immunotoxicological tests should be used to determine the effects of engineered nanoparticles on human immune responses. However, before assays can be standardised, it is important that suitable methods are established and validated.Results: In a collaborative work between European laboratories, existing immunological and toxicological in vitro assays were tested and compared for their suitability to test effects of nanoparticles on immune responses. The prototypical nanoparticles used were metal (oxide) particles, either custom-generated by wet synthesis or commercially available as powders. Several problems and challenges were encountered during assay validation, rang ing from particle agglomeration in biological media and optical interference with assay systems, to chemical immunotoxicity of solvents and contamination with endotoxin.Conclusion: The problems that were encountered in the immunological assay systems used in this study, such as chemical or endotoxin contamination and optical interference caused by the dense material, significantly affected the data obtained. These problems have to be solved to enable the development of reliable assays for the assessment of nano-immunosafety