Abstract

Nanocrystalline Mg–Cu–Zn ferrite powders were successfully synthesized through nitrate–citrate gel auto-combustion method. Characterization of the nitrate–citrate gel, as-burnt powder and calcined powders at different calcination conditions were investigated by using XRD, DTA/TG, IR spectra, EDX, VSM, SEM and TEM techniques. IR spectra and DTA/TGA studies revealed that the combustion process is an oxidation–reduction reaction in which the NO3− ion is oxidant and the carboxyl group is reductant. The results of XRD show that the decomposition of the gel indicated a gradual transition from an amorphous material to a crystalline phase. In addition, increasing the calcination temperature resulted in increasing the crystallite size of Mg–Cu–Zn ferrite powders. VSM measurement also indicated that the maximum saturation magnetization (64.1 emu/g) appears for sample calcined at 800 °C while there is not much further increase in Ms at higher calcination temperature. The value of coercivity field (Hc) presents a maximum value of 182.7 Oe at calcination temperature 700 °C. TEM micrograph of the sample calcined at 800 °C showed spherical nanocrystalline ferrite powders with mean size of 36 nm. The toroidal sample sintered at 900 °C for 4 h presents the initial permeability (μi) of 405 at 1 MHz and electrical resistivity (ρ) of 1.02 × 108 Ω cm.

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