Abstract

Nanocrystalline nickel–molybdenum (Ni–Mo) alloy thin films were electrochemically synthesized in acidic and alkaline aqueous solutions. Transmission electron microscope bright-field images and electron diffraction patterns of the electrodeposits made it obvious that pure Ni consists of a submicron crystalline phase with the grain diameter of several hundred nanometers, while Ni–20 %Mo alloy was composed of a nanocrystalline phase with the grain diameter of a few nanometers. It was estimated that the nanocrystalline phase of electrodeposited Ni–Mo alloy thin films was introduced by the formation of supersaturated Ni–Mo solid solution phase with Mo content in the deposit more than 20 %. Submicron crystalline pure Ni thin films were hardly magnetized in perpendicular direction to the film plane while the nanocrystalline Ni–20 %Mo alloy thin films were isotropically magnetized. It was suggested that the isotropical magnetization behavior was caused by decreasing the demagnetizing field and the magneto crystalline anisotropy with a decrease in the magnetic moment and the average crystal grain size. Coercive force of a submicron crystalline pure Ni thin film electrodeposited from an acidic aqueous solution was ca. 100 Oe while that of a nanocrystalline Ni–20 %Mo alloy thin film electrodeposited from an alkaline aqueous solution was only 1∼2 Oe. Soft magnetic properties of Ni–Mo alloy thin films electrodeposited from an alkaline aqueous solution were better than that from an acidic aqueous solution and it was improved with an increase in Mo content in the deposit. It was estimated that the electrodeposited Ni–Mo alloy catalysts could be easily recovered with magnetic field less than 1 kOe.

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