Abstract

Magnetic nanocrystalline MnO particles have been synthesized in a silica glass matrix by the sol–gel method at calcination temperatures up to 1000°C. EPR spectra of 0.1mol% MnO doped silica gel and glasses studied in the temperature range 10–290K show with the exception of those samples calcined at 900 and 1000°C 6-line characteristic Mn(II) hyperfine (HF) lines. Additionally five spin-forbidden doublets have been observed at 100K and below. Small spreads in spin Hamiltonian parameters (D and E) imply that the ligand field environments of Mn(II) ions embedded in the silica glass are nearly uniform. Monotonous decrease in HF linewidth in going from 120°C gel to 800°C calcined glass has been interpreted as the continuous decrease in population of isolated Mn2+ ions in silica glass matrix resulting in the decrease of magnetic dipolar interactions leading to the observed decrease in HF linewidth. XRD and TEM of sample calcined at 1000°C shows the presence of nanocrystals of MnO having orthorhombic crystalline phase and sizes about 10nm. The thermal behavior of magnetization (zero-field-cooled and field-cooled) and magnetic hysteresis of MnO nanocrystals in the 5–300K temperature interval have demonstrated that the MnO nanocrystals display superparamagnetic–ferromagnetic transition at low temperatures. X-band EPR linewidth data plotted versus inverse of temperature (1/T) for samples calcined at 900 and 1000°C (EPR recorded in the vicinity of 0.35T applied field) depict similar transitions.

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