Structure, microstructure and magnetic investigation of the hexagonal d-FeSe nanophase produced by mechanochemical synthesis
View/ Open
Date
2020Author
Type
Abstract
We present a systematic structural, microstructural and magnetic characterization of the hexagonal d-FeSe nanophase produced by a simple one-step mechanochemical synthesis route, by using conventional X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD), Rietveld refinement, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and magnetometry techniques. We observed the simultaneous formation of tetragonal b-FeSe and d-FeSe after 3 h of milling (with minor amounts of unreacted iron), followed by complete b-FeSe / d-FeSe phase t ...
We present a systematic structural, microstructural and magnetic characterization of the hexagonal d-FeSe nanophase produced by a simple one-step mechanochemical synthesis route, by using conventional X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD), Rietveld refinement, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and magnetometry techniques. We observed the simultaneous formation of tetragonal b-FeSe and d-FeSe after 3 h of milling (with minor amounts of unreacted iron), followed by complete b-FeSe / d-FeSe phase transition as milling time increases to 6 h (no unreacted iron). The average crystallite size of the dFeSe phase of about 16 nm after 3 h milling time decreases by about 31% up to the final milling time (24 h). TEM images and electron diffraction patterns confirm the nanometric size of the crystalline domains in the irregularly-shaped agglomerated particles. Two ferromagnetic phases with distinct coercivity spectra were assumed here by considering an assembly of randomly-oriented weakly-anisotropic ferromagnetic particles, mixed at a 4 to 6 volume ratio with other randomly-oriented ferromagnetic grains. Four years after synthesis, the aged samples milled for less than 9 h revealed a certain amount of the b-FeSe phase that slightly affects the d-FeSe (micro)structure but causes some variations (decreasing) in magnetic parameters. Milling times as long as 12 h were shown to be necessary to guarantee the d-FeSe nanophase stability and to retain its magnetic properties over time. ...
In
RSC Advances. Cambridge. Vol. 10, no. 65 (2020), p. 39406-39412
Source
Foreign
Collections
-
Journal Articles (42123)Exact and Earth Sciences (6312)
This item is licensed under a Creative Commons License
