Nanomaterials (Jul 2021)

Understanding the Dependence of Nanoparticles Magnetothermal Properties on Their Size for Hyperthermia Applications: A Case Study for La-Sr Manganites

  • Mylla C. Ferreira,
  • Bruno Pimentel,
  • Vivian Andrade,
  • Vladimir Zverev,
  • Radel R. Gimaev,
  • Andrei S. Pomorov,
  • Alexander Pyatakov,
  • Yulia Alekhina,
  • Aleksei Komlev,
  • Liudmila Makarova,
  • Nikolai Perov,
  • Mario S. Reis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11071826
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 1826

Abstract

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Magnetic oxides are promising materials for alternative health diagnoses and treatments. The aim of this work is to understand the dependence of the heating power with the nanoparticle (NP) mean size, for the manganite composition La0.75Sr0.25MnO3 (LSMO)—the one with maximum critical temperature for the whole La/Sr ratio of the series. We have prepared four different samples, each one annealed at different temperatures, in order to produce different mean NP sizes, ranging from 26 nm up to 106 nm. Magnetization measurements revealed a FC-ZFC irreversibility and from the coercive field as function of temperature we determined the blocking temperature. A phase diagram was delivered as a function of the NP mean size and, based on this, the heating mechanism understood. Small NPs (26 nm) is heated up within the paramagnetic range of temperature (T>Tc), and therefore provide low heating efficiency; while bigger NPs are heated up, from room temperature, within the magnetically blocked range of temperature (TTB), and also provide a small heating efficiency. The main finding of this article is related with the heating process for NPs within the magnetically unblocked range of temperature (Tc>T>TB), for intermediate mean diameter size of 37 nm, with maximum efficiency of heat transfer.

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