Abstract

The magnetic properties of nickel ferrite nanoparticles in the form of powders, prepared by the sol–gel process and subjected to different annealing temperatures, were investigated using both static and dynamic measurements namely hysteresis, zero field cooled–field cooled magnetization (ZFC–FC) measurements and Mössbauer spectroscopy. The Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) studies reveal particle sizes ∼ 2 – 8 nm for the as-prepared particles which increases upto 52 nm with annealing. A bimodal distribution, upto an annealing temperature of 300 ° C was observed. ZFC–FC measurements for the as-prepared samples reveal twin peaks, indicative of the bimodal size distribution. ZFC–FC measurements performed for fields varying from 100 Oe to 3 kOe show a superparamagnetic phase with blocking temperatures between 320 and 85 K . Numerical simulations for the ZFC–FC studies indicate that the signature of the bimodal size distribution can be seen only at very low fields. The variation of coercivity with particle size, as determined from the hysteresis measurements, shows a transition from a single domain to a multi domain state for particle sizes larger than 35 nm. Mössbauer measurements performed at room temperature for the as-prepared sample shows a six finger pattern for the samples with higher particle size and a doublet pattern for the samples with smaller particle size, which is indicative of their superparamagnetic nature.

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