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V. Langlais

Bio: V. Langlais is an academic researcher from Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coercivity & Néel temperature. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 3 publications receiving 122 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the fabrication process and magnetic properties of three types of system consisting of ferromagnetic (FM) particles embedded in an antiferromagnetic matrix are discussed, and the preparation techniques are ball milling, H2 partial reduction of oxides and nanoparticle gas condensation.
Abstract: The fabrication process and magnetic properties of three types of system consisting of ferromagnetic (FM) particles embedded in an antiferromagnetic (AFM) matrix are discussed. The preparation techniques are ball milling, H2 partial reduction of oxides and nanoparticle gas condensation. The magnetic properties of the FM/AFM composites are shown to depend strongly on the morphology of the system (e.g., nanoparticle size), the AFM anisotropy and the AFM-FM coupling. For example, all the studied systems exhibit coercivity enhancement below the Neel temperature of the AFM. However, while Co nanoparticles embedded in CoO exhibit loop shifts of thousands of Oe, Fe nanoparticles in Cr2O3 only show a few Oe shifts. An interesting effect evidenced in all systems is the increase of remanence (MR) which, in the case of Co-CoO, ultimately leads to an improvement of the superparamagnetic blocking temperature of the nanoparticles.

80 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the initial microstructure of the NiO powder has been shown to play an important role in the reduction rate and on the final microstructures of the nanocomposites formed.
Abstract: Controlled mechanochemical reduction of NiO has been carried out by room-temperature ball milling under H2 atmosphere. During the milling, a gradual conversion of NiO into Ni occurs, with no intermediate phases being formed. The amount of Ni and its crystallite size can be tuned by the ball-milling parameters, leading to the formation of Ni−NiO (metal−oxide) nanocomposites. The initial microstructure of the NiO powder is shown to play an important role in the reduction rate and on the final microstructure of the nanocomposites formed. The results indicate that the mechanically induced defects have a strong influence on the kinetics of the reduction process.

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the fabrication process and magnetic properties of three types of system consisting of ferromagnetic (FM) particles embedded in an antiferromagnetic matrix are discussed, and the preparation techniques are ball milling, H2 partial reduction of oxides and nanoparticle gas condensation.
Abstract: The fabrication process and magnetic properties of three types of system consisting of ferromagnetic (FM) particles embedded in an antiferromagnetic (AFM) matrix are discussed. The preparation techniques are ball milling, H2 partial reduction of oxides and nanoparticle gas condensation. The magnetic properties of the FM/AFM composites are shown to depend strongly on the morphology of the system (e.g., nanoparticle size), the AFM anisotropy and the AFM-FM coupling. For example, all the studied systems exhibit coercivity enhancement below the Neel temperature of the AFM. However, while Co nanoparticles embedded in CoO exhibit loop shifts of thousands of Oe, Fe nanoparticles in Cr2O3 only show a few Oe shifts. An interesting effect evidenced in all systems is the increase of remanence (MR) which, in the case of Co-CoO, ultimately leads to an improvement of the superparamagnetic blocking temperature of the nanoparticles.

1 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The phenomenology of exchange bias and related effects in nanostructures is reviewed in this paper, where the main applications of exchange biased nanostructure are summarized and the implications of the nanometer dimensions on some of the existing exchange bias theories are briefly discussed.

1,721 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized the recent progress in the synthesis of magnetic nanoparticles and nanoscale interactions leading to their self-assembly into 1D, 2D or 3D aggregates.
Abstract: Nanostructured magnetic materials have a variety of promising applications spreading from nano-scale electronic devices, sensors and high-density data storage media to controlled drug delivery and cancer diagnostics/treatment systems. Magnetic nanoparticles offer the most natural and elegant way for fabrication of such (multi-) functional materials. In this review, we briefly summarize the recent progress in the synthesis of magnetic nanoparticles (which now can be done with precise control over the size and surface chemistry), and nanoscale interactions leading to their self-assembly into 1D, 2D or 3D aggregates. Various approaches to self-organization, directed-, or template-assisted assembly of these nanostructures are discussed with the special emphasis on magnetic-field enabled interactions. We also discuss new physical phenomena associated with magnetic coupling between nanoparticles and their interaction with a substrate and the characterization of the physical properties at the nanoscale using various experimental techniques (including scanning quantum interferometry (SQUID) and magnetic force microscopy). Applications of magnetic nanoparticle assemblies in data storage, spintronics, drug delivery, cancer therapy, and prospective applications such as adaptive materials and multifunctional reconfigurable materials are also highlighted.

446 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The phenomenology of exchange bias effects observed in structurally single-phase alloys and compounds but composed of a variety of coexisting magnetic phases such as ferromagnetic, antiferromagnetic.
Abstract: The phenomenology of exchange bias effects observed in structurally single-phase alloys and compounds but composed of a variety of coexisting magnetic phases such as ferromagnetic, antiferromagnetic, ferrimagnetic, spin-glass, cluster-glass and disordered magnetic states are reviewed. The investigations on exchange bias effects are discussed in diverse types of alloys and compounds where qualitative and quantitative aspects of magnetism are focused based on macroscopic experimental tools such as magnetization and magnetoresistance measurements. Here, we focus on improvement of fundamental issues of the exchange bias effects rather than on their technological importance.

348 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The magnetic properties of ferromagnetic-antiferromagnetic Co-CoO core-shell nanoparticles are investigated as a function of the in-plane coverage density and the superparamagnetic blocking temperature, the coercivity, and the bias field radically increase with increasing coverage.
Abstract: The magnetic properties of ferromagnetic-antiferromagnetic Co-CoO core-shell nanoparticles are investigated as a function of the in-plane coverage density from 3.5% to 15%. The superparamagnetic blocking temperature, the coercivity, and the bias field radically increase with increasing coverage. This behavior cannot be attributed to the overall interactions between cores. Rather, it can be semiquantitatively understood by assuming that the shells of isolated core-shell nanoparticles have strongly degraded magnetic properties, which are rapidly recovered as nanoparticles come into contact.

193 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the surface of the nano-structured fly ash has been characterized for its particle size by using particle size analyzer, specific surface area with the help of BET surface area apparatus, structure by X-ray diffraction studies and FTIR, SEM and TEM have been used to study particle aggregation and shape of the particles.
Abstract: The Class F fly ash has been subjected to high energy ball milling and has been converted into nanostructured material. The nano structured fly ash has been characterized for its particle size by using particle size analyzer, specific surface area with the help of BET surface area apparatus, structure by X-ray diffraction studies and FTIR, SEM and TEM have been used to study particle aggregation and shape of the particles. On ball milling, the particle size got reduced from 60 μm to 148 nm by 405 times and the surface area increased from 0.249 m2/gm to 25.53 m2/gm i.e. by more than 100%. Measurement of surface free energy as well as work of adhesion found that it increased with increased duration of ball milling. The crystallite was reduced from 36.22 nm to 23.01 nm for quartz and from 33.72 nm to 16.38 nm for mullite during ball milling to 60 h. % crystallinity reduced from 35% to 16% during 60 h of ball milling because of destruction of quartz and hematite crystals and the nano structured fly ash is found to be more amorphous. Surface of the nano structured fly ash has become more active as is evident from the FTIR studies. Morphological studies revealed that the surface of the nano structured fly ash is more uneven and rough and shape is irregular, as compared to fresh fly ash which are mostly spherical in shape.

176 citations