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Journal ArticleDOI

Beating the superparamagnetic limit with exchange bias

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TLDR
It is shown that magnetic exchange coupling induced at the interface between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic systems can provide an extra source of anisotropy, leading to magnetization stability.
Abstract
Interest in magnetic nanoparticles has increased in the past few years by virtue of their potential for applications in fields such as ultrahigh-density recording and medicine. Most applications rely on the magnetic order of the nanoparticles being stable with time. However, with decreasing particle size the magnetic anisotropy energy per particle responsible for holding the magnetic moment along certain directions becomes comparable to the thermal energy. When this happens, the thermal fluctuations induce random flipping of the magnetic moment with time, and the nanoparticles lose their stable magnetic order and become superparamagnetic. Thus, the demand for further miniaturization comes into conflict with the superparamagnetism caused by the reduction of the anisotropy energy per particle: this constitutes the so-called 'superparamagnetic limit' in recording media. Here we show that magnetic exchange coupling induced at the interface between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic systems can provide an extra source of anisotropy, leading to magnetization stability. We demonstrate this principle for ferromagnetic cobalt nanoparticles of about 4 nm in diameter that are embedded in either a paramagnetic or an antiferromagnetic matrix. Whereas the cobalt cores lose their magnetic moment at 10 K in the first system, they remain ferromagnetic up to about 290 K in the second. This behaviour is ascribed to the specific way ferromagnetic nanoparticles couple to an antiferromagnetic matrix.

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Citations
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Magnetic nanoparticles: Synthesis, protection, functionalization, and application

TL;DR: This review focuses on the synthesis, protection, functionalization, and application of magnetic nanoparticles, as well as the magnetic properties of nanostructured systems.
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The emergence of spin electronics in data storage

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Journal ArticleDOI

Exchange bias in nanostructures

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.
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Antiferromagnetic spintronics

TL;DR: A review of the most prominent spintronic effects described based on theoretical and experimental analysis of antiferromagnetic materials can be found in this article, where the authors discuss some of the remaining bottlenecks and suggest possible avenues for future research.
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Bimetallic Nanocrystals: Syntheses, Properties, and Applications

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of recent research activities on bimetallic nanocrystals, featuring key examples from the literature that exemplify critical concepts and place a special emphasis on mechanistic understanding.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Monodisperse FePt Nanoparticles and Ferromagnetic FePt Nanocrystal Superlattices

TL;DR: Thermal annealing converts the internal particle structure from a chemically disordered face- centered cubic phase to the chemically ordered face-centered tetragonal phase and transforms the nanoparticle superlattices into ferromagnetic nanocrystal assemblies that can support high-density magnetization reversal transitions.
Journal ArticleDOI

New Magnetic Anisotropy

TL;DR: In this article, a new type of magnetic anisotropy was discovered which is best described as an exchange anisotropic, which is the result of an interaction between an antiferromagnetic material and a ferromagnetic materials.
Book

Physics of ferromagnetism

TL;DR: Magnetic properties of magnetism have been studied in a wide range of applications, including magnetism of amorphous materials, magnetism and magnetostriction as mentioned in this paper, spin distribution and domain walls.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermal effect limits in ultrahigh-density magnetic recording

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss thermal effects in the framework of basic Arrhenius-Neel statistical switching models and reveal the onset of thermal decay at "stability ratios" (k/sub u/V/K/sub B/T)/sub 0//spl sime/35 /spl plusmn/ 2.
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