Yüksel KöseoğluH. Kavasand B. Aktaş
Abstract Superparamagnetic nanoparticles of magnetite (Fe 3 O 4 ) 2 nm in size were produced by a co‐precipitation method. Superparamagnetic resonance (SPR) spectra at room temperature show a broad line with a Landé g ‐factor, g eff ≈ 2. It was observed that, as the temperature decreased to 24 K, the apparent resonance field decreases while the line width considerably increases. We used a theoretical formalism based on a distribution of diameters or volumes of the nanoparticles. The nanoparticles behave as single magnetic domains with random orientations of magnetic moments which are subject to thermal fluctuations. A Landau–Lifshitz line shape function presents adequate results which are in good agreement with the experimental ones. A single set of parameters provides good fits to the spectra recorded at different temperatures. At high T the SPR line shape is governed by the core anisotropy and the thermal fluctuations. By decreasing the temperature, the magnetic susceptibility of shell spins increases. As a result of this, the surface spins produce an effective field on the core leading to a decrease of resonance field, B r . Also, the effective anisotropy increases as the shell spins begin to order. So, the results are interpreted by a simple model, in which each single‐domain nanoparticle is considered as a core–shell system, with magnetocrystalline anisotropy on the core and surface anisotropy on the shell. (© 2006 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
Minjung KimYong‐Ho ChoaDong Ho KimKi Hyeon Kim
Bashiru Kayode SodipoAzlan Abdul Aziz
S. A. KunikinArthur ZakinyanYuri Dikansky
Xue‐Li CaoBaolin ZhangFangyuan ZhaoLingyun Feng
Hannah MetteeAaron AsparinZulaikha AliShi HeXianzhi LiJ. C. HallArtem KimShuo WuMorgan J. HawkerMasaki UchidaHe Wei