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Outline. How is ferromagnetism manifested? What are the types of magnetism? What is Fe 3 O 4 – spinel? What is nanoscience? How do we make ferrofluids?. We will have a Monday class next week. Turn in extra credit Writing exercises will be returned
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Outline • How is ferromagnetism manifested? • What are the types of magnetism? • What is Fe3O4 – spinel? • What is nanoscience? • How do we make ferrofluids?
We will have a Monday class next week • Turn in extra credit • Writing exercises will be returned • Possible chance for regaining lost points • SRTI evaluations
Magnetic field attraction N S N S repulsion N S S N The field of a force – a property of the space in which the force acts http://www.trincoll.edu/~cgeiss/GEOS_312/GEOS_312.htm
Interaction with magnetic field B aligning torque: m = pd m = AIn τ = m B sinθ +p d θ θ -p http://www.trincoll.edu/~cgeiss/GEOS_312/GEOS_312.htm
Magnetic field (force lines) F N S Magnetic field is not a central field (no free magnetic charges) http://www.trincoll.edu/~cgeiss/GEOS_312/GEOS_312.htm
Behavior of magnetic materials Magnetization (cmormBor M) Ferromagnet, Ferrimagnet Paramagnet Antiferromagnet Temperature TNeel TCurie
Types of bulk magnetism Ferromagnetism Antiferromagnetism Ferrimagnetism Paramagnetism H Large M (1-5 mB / atom) Small M (10-3mB / atom) Small M (10-3mB / atom) Large M (1-5 mB / atom)
Development of permanent (hard) magnets Hard magnets Soft magnets M M http://www.tf.uni-kiel.de/matwis/amat/elmat_en/kap_4/backbone/r4_3_6.html
ZnO nanowire UV lasers of about 100nm diameter and 10mm length synthesized at Berkeley. (Yang et al, Science, 292, p. 1897, 2001). Contacts on a 60nm bismuth wire to study motion of single defects (kmf.pa.msu.edu/Research/resrch04.asp ) ZnO nanowire UV lasers of about 100 nm diameter and 10 mm length synthesized at Berkeley. (Yang et al, Science, 292, p. 1897, 2001)
Radius rules • A sphere of this size (relative to the lattice of size of its neighbors) is just able to touch all off its neighbors for the void geometries below. • Similar considerations govern the formation of more complex structural arrangements
Electronic and magnetic materials can be combined into sophisticated devices
Magnetite Fe3O4 • Magnetite vs. lodestone • General spinel formula: AB2O4 A = 2+ metal, B = 3+ metal • 1/2 of octahedral holes, 1/8 of tetrahedral holes filled on an approximate FCC oxygen lattice • Fe3O4 1 Fe2+ + 2 Fe3+ • Inverse spinel B(AB)O4 • Ferrimagnetic ordering at ~850K • Synthesis: 2 FeCl3 + FeCl2 + 8 NH3 + 4H2O --> Fe3O4 + 8 NH4Cl
Magnetite (Fe3O4) Unit cell: A-sites (8 Fe3+) B-sites (8 Fe3+ and 8 Fe2+) Normal Spinel (ZnFe2O4) Inverse Spinel (Fe3O4) A B A B => Ferrimagnetism Zn2+ Fe3+ Fe3+ Fe3+ Fe3+ Fe2+ 5µB 5µB 4µB
Development of permanent (hard) magnets Magnetic energy (Gauss / m3) Steel M Nd2Fe14B Magnetic energy (Gauss / m3) M Steel http://www.tf.uni-kiel.de/matwis/amat/elmat_en/kap_4/backbone/r4_3_6.html
Types of bulk magnetism Ferromagnetism Antiferromagnetism Ferrimagnetism Paramagnetism H Large M (1-5 mB / atom) Small M (10-3mB / atom) Small M (10-3mB / atom) Large M (1-5 mB / atom)
Canted Antiferromagnetism Ferromagnetism Antiferromagnetism Ferrimagnetism H Canted Antiferromagnetism Ferromagnetism Antiferromagnetism Ferrimagnetism H
Ferromagnetism Antiferromagnetism Ferrimagnetism Paramagnetism H Ferromagnetism Antiferromagnetism Ferrimagnetism Paramagnetism H
Types of magnetism Ferromagnetism Antiferromagnetism Ferrimagnetism Paramagnetism H Large M (1-5 mB / atom) Small M (10-3mB / atom) Small M (10-3mB / atom) Large M (1-5 mB / atom)
Ferrofluid topics • Magnetic dipoles, not monopoles like charges • Field gradient - emphasized by magnetic field lines • A “test dipole” will aligns itself parallel to magnetic field lines