FMR and DSC study of maghemite nanoparticles in
PMMA polymer matrix
J. Typek1 , N. Guskos1,2, A. Szymczyk1, D. Petridis3
1Institute of Physics, Szczecin University of Technology, Szczecin, Poland2Department of Physics, University of Athens, Greece
3NCSR Demokritos, Aghia Paraskevi, Athens, Greece
Maghemite – γ-Fe2O3 (iron(III) oxide)
• inverse spinel cubic structure
• stoichiometric formula
(Fe3+)A O2- (Fe3+ Fe3+2/3[ ]1/3)B O2-
3
• 8 Fe3+ ions located in tetrahedral sites (A-sites) and 16 Fe3+ ions in octahedral sites (B-sites)
• collinear ferrimagnet
• antiparallel magnetic sublattices A (4.18 μB) and B (4.41 μB)
• TC=590-675ºC
PMMA (polymethyl methacrylate)
• Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) or poly (methyl 2-methylpropenoate) is the synthetic polymer of methyl methacrylate. This thermoplastic and transparent plastic is sold by the tradenames Plexiglas, R-Cast, Perspex, Plazcryl, Limacryl, Acrylex, Acrylite, Acrylplast, Altuglas, Polycast and Lucite and is commonly called acrylic glass or simply acrylic. The material was developed in 1928 in various laboratories and was brought to market in 1933.
• Temperature of the glass transition Tg = 85-105ºC
• Melting temperatures 130-140ºC
Synthesis of γ-Fe2O3 /PMMA nanocomposite
•Procedure: preparation of capped magnetic nanoparticles → exchange of the oleate units by methacrylate units → preparation of γ-Fe2O3/PMMA composite
•γ-Fe2O3 nanocrystalline particles with an average size of 10 nm, chemically bonded to the chains
•The surface bond oleate groups can be fully exchanged with metacrylate units by refluxing in ethanol. The exchange reaction ensures the chemical bonding of methacrylate units to the surface of nanoparticles, which in turn, undergo the polymerization with the vinyl groups of the methyl mathacrylate.
•Magnetic nanoparticles capped with oleic acid were prepared by one step method involving partial oxidation of Fe(II) in alkaline solutions by dilute H2O2. The reaction was conducted in the presence of oleic acid and under biphase conditions.
Incorporation of nanoparticles in the polymer matrix through chemical bonding
FMR investigated samples – 5 wt% and 10 wt% γ-Fe2O3
DSC study of γ-Fe2O3/PMMA nanocomposite
Maghemite content wt%
Tg
[ºC]
Cp
[J/g ºC]
0 99.60 0.349
5 103.80 0.337
10 107.11 0.317
PMMA/5
103.80°C(H)0.3373J/(g·°C)98.19°C
109.55°C
PMMA/10107.11°C(H)0.3168J/(g·°C)101.44°C
112.76°C
-0.3
-0.2
-0.1
0.0
0.1
0.2
Hea
t Flo
w (
W/g
)
40 60 80 100 120 140 160
Temperature (°C)Exo Up Universal V4.1D TA Instruments
•Tg increases with maghemite content increase →reduced dynamics of polymer chains, hidering segmental motion• cp heat capacity decreases with maghemite content → increase of steric hindrance
FMR spectra – temperature dependence
5 wt%
High-temperature rangeLow-temperature rangeTblock ~ 40 K ?
T=150 K PMMA relaxation?
FMR parameters – integrated intensity
5 wt%
•FMR integrated intensity Iz ~ (FMR signal amplitude)·(ΔB)2
• Integrated intensity Iz ~ spin susceptibility χ’’
•Iz·T ~(magnetic moment)1/2
FMR spectra: γ-Fe2O3 content
10 wt% 5 wt%
The difference (in intensity) is observed for T>250 K. It could be attributed to the dipol-dipol magnetic interaction between nanoparticles.
FMR spectra - decompositionT=71 K, 5 wt%
Narrow (high-field) component → magnetic easy axis external magnetic field
Broad (low-field) component → magnetic easy axis || external magnetic field
FMR spectrum decomposition5 wt%
FMR spectrum decomposition
g-fa
ctor
Line
wid
th [
Gs]
Temperature [K] Temperature [K]
Narrow component
Broad component
Mag
netic
mom
ent
10 wt%
FMR spectrum decompositionIn
tegr
ated
inte
nsity
[ar
b. u
nits
]
Temperature [K]
Narrow component
(high field)
Broad component
(low-field)
10 wt%
B0
B0
Conclusions
• Increase in maghemite content → Tglass decreases
• Blocking temperature ~40 K• Relaxation in PMMA=150 K• Maghemite content differences seen in FMR above 250 K• FMR spectrum reflects magnetic anisotropy of nanoparticles