Physical Review X (Nov 2019)

Vacancy-Driven Noncubic Local Structure and Magnetic Anisotropy Tailoring in Fe_{x}O-Fe_{3−δ}O_{4} Nanocrystals

  • Alexandros Lappas,
  • George Antonaropoulos,
  • Konstantinos Brintakis,
  • Marianna Vasilakaki,
  • Kalliopi N. Trohidou,
  • Vincenzo Iannotti,
  • Giovanni Ausanio,
  • Athanasia Kostopoulou,
  • Milinda Abeykoon,
  • Ian K. Robinson,
  • Emil S. Bozin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.9.041044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
p. 041044

Abstract

Read online Read online

In contrast to bulk materials, nanoscale crystal growth is critically influenced by size- and shape-dependent properties. However, it is challenging to decipher how stoichiometry, in the realm of mixed-valence elements, can act to control physical properties, especially when complex bonding is implicated by short- and long-range ordering of structural defects. Here, solution-grown iron-oxide nanocrystals (NCs) of the pilot wüstite system are found to convert into iron-deficient rock-salt and ferro-spinel subdomains but attain a surprising tetragonally distorted local structure. Cationic vacancies within chemically uniform NCs are portrayed as the parameter to tweak the underlying properties. These lattice imperfections are shown to produce local exchange-anisotropy fields that reinforce the nanoparticles’ magnetization and overcome the influence of finite-size effects. The concept of atomic-scale defect control in subcritical-size NCs aspires to become a pathway to tailor-made properties with improved performance for hyperthermia heating over defect-free NCs.