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American Chemical Society, Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 46(119), p. 26219-26228, 2015

DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.5b09046

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Implications of Room Temperature Oxidation on Crystal Structure and Exchange Bias Effect in Co/CoO Nanoparticles

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

We describe here how the exchange bias effect in Co/CoO nanoparticles depends on the size focusing and temperature treatment of precursor Co nanoparticles before oxidation at ambient conditions. By appealing to magnetization, microscopy, neutron, and synchrotron X-ray measurements, we found that as-synthesized Co nanoparticles readily oxidize in air only after 20 days. The highest exchange bias field of 814 Oe is observed at T = 2 K. When the same nanoparticles are centrifuged and annealed at 70 °C under vacuum prior to oxidation, the exchange bias field is increased to 2570 Oe. Annealing of Co nanoparticles in vacuum improves their crystallinity and prevents complete oxidation, so that Co-core/CoO-shell structure is preserved even after 120 days. The crystal structure of CoO shell in both samples is different from its bulk counterpart. Implications of such distorted CoO shells on exchange bias are discussed. Coating of Co nanoparticles with amorphous silica shell makes them resistant to oxidation but ultimately modifies the crystal structure of both Co core and SiO2 shell.