Abstract

Magnetic nanostructured materials (MNMs) have gained prominence in materials technology developments owing to their potential biomedical applications for hyperthermia cancer treatment, and transplant organ cryopreservation. Herein, we report the facile and cost-effective synthesis of Fe-based composite MNMs, comprising both Fe@Fe2O3 and Fe3C@C core-shell nanoparticles (NPs), via Laser Ablation Synthesis in Solution (LASiS) using Fe targets ablated under acetone and toluene. Detailed materials characterizations using electron microscopy-based imaging, diffraction studies, and spectroscopic analyses - including Raman and Mössbauer spectroscopy - relate the structure-composition properties for different Fe-oxide/carbide phases in the aforesaid MNMs to their respective magnetic responses. Specifically, we confirm the presence of ultra-small (2–10 nm) amorphous Fe-oxide NPs, as well as Fe@Fe2O3 core-shell NPs (20–40 nm) in the samples synthesized by ablating Fe under acetone. In contrast, samples synthesized under toluene indicate a higher concentration of Fe3C@C core-shell NPs (20–40 nm) with a relatively low concentration of Fe2O3 NPs (2–10 nm). Furthermore, the crystallinity of the metallic phases and carbonaceous shell coatings are systematically increased by carrying out LASiS under heated toluene (up to ∼95 °C). Mössbauer spectroscopy results indicate that the elevation in toluene temperature leads to an increase in the concentrations of Fe3C@C NPs from ∼40 % to ∼53 % (at.).

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