Abstract

Crystalline, magnetic, cobalt ferrite nanoparticles were synthesized from an aqueous solution containing metal nitrates and polyvinyl pyrrolidone (PVP) as a capping agent by a thermal treatment followed by calcination at various temperatures from 673 to 923?K. The structural characteristics of the calcined samples were determined by X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). A completed crystallization occurred at 823 and 923?K, as shown by the absence of organic absorption bands in the FT-IR spectrum. Magnetization measurements were obtained at room temperature by using a vibrating sample magnetometer (VSM), which showed that the calcined samples exhibited typical magnetic behaviors.

1. Introduction

The spinel ferrite structure with the formula of MFe2O4 (M = Co, Ni, Zn, or other metals) can be described as a cubic, closely packed arrangement of oxygen atoms, and M2+ and Fe3+ ions can occupy either tetrahedral (A) or octahedral (B) sites [1]. Spinel ferrite nanoparticles have attracted much attention because of their electronic, magnetic, and catalytic properties, all of which are different from those of their bulk counterparts. Among spinel ferrites, cobalt ferrite (CoFe2O4) has an inverse spinel structure in which, in the ideal state, all Co2+ ions are in B sites, and Fe3+ ions are equally distributed between A and B sites. Cobalt ferrite has been widely studied due to its high electromagnetic performance, excellent chemical stability, mechanical hardness, high coercivity, and moderate saturation magnetization, which make it a good candidate for the electronic components used in computers, recording devices, and magnetic cards [24]. These properties are dependent on chemical composition and microstructural characteristics, which can be controlled in the fabrication and synthesis processes.

In order to acquire materials with the desired physical and chemical properties, the preparation of cobalt ferrite nanoparticles through different routes has become an important area of research and development. Various methods of synthesizing spinel cobalt ferrite nanoparticles have been reported, such as ball milling [5], a ceramic method by firing [5], coprecipitation [57], reverse micelles [8], hydrothermal methods [9, 10], a polymeric precursor [11], sol-gel [12], microemulsions [13], laser ablation [14], a polyol method [15], sonochemical approaches [16], and aerosol method [17]. Various precipitation agents have been used to prepare cobalt ferrite nanoparticles of a specific size and shape, for example, metal hydroxide in the co-precipitation method, surfactant and ammonia in the reverse micelles and microemulsion methods, and organic matrices in the polymeric precursor, sol-gel, and polyol methods. Most of these methods have achieved nanoparticles of the required sizes and microstructures, but they are difficult to apply on larger scales because of their expensive and complicated procedures, high reaction temperatures, long reaction times, toxic reagents and by-products, and their potential harm to the environment.

In the present study, cobalt ferrite nanoparticles were synthesized from an aqueous solution containing metal nitrates, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, and deionized water using a thermal treatment method followed by crushing and calcination. This method does not require the addition of any other chemicals to the solution, and it has the advantages of simplicity, a low cost, a lack of by-product effluents, and an environmentally friendly operation. The textural and morphological characteristics of the prepared cobalt ferrite nanoparticles were studied with various techniques to verify the particle size and distribution as well as to explore other parameters of interest.

2. Experimental

2.1. Materials

Metal nitrate reagents were used as precursors, poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) (PVP) was used as a capping agent to reduce the agglomeration of the particles, and deionized water was used as the solvent. Iron nitrate, Fe(NO3)3·9 H2O, and cobalt nitrate, Co(NO3)2·6H2O, were purchased from Acros Organics with purities exceeding 99%. PVP (MW = 29000) was purchased from Sigma Aldrich and was used without further purification. An aqueous solution of PVP was prepared by dissolving 3?g of polymer in 100?ml of deionized water at 343?K, before mixing 0.2?mmol of iron nitrate and 0.1?mmol of cobalt nitrate (Fe?:?Co=2?:?1) into the polymer solution and constantly stirring for 2?h using a magnetic stirrer until a colorless, transparent solution was obtained. The solution had a pH from 1 to 2 measured by means of a glass electrode. No precipitation of materials occurred before the heat treatment. The mixed solution was poured into a glass Petri dish and heated at 353?K in an oven for 24?h to evaporate the water. The resulting orange solid was crushed for 15?min in a mortar to form powder. The calcinations of the powder was conducted at 673, 723, 823, and 923?K for 3?h for the decomposition of the organic compounds and the crystallization of the nanoparticles.

2.2. Characterization

The characterization of the prepared cobalt ferrite nanoparticles was conducted by using various techniques to verify the particle size and distribution and to explore other parameters of interest. The structure of the CoFe2O4 nanoparticles was characterized by the XRD technique using a Shimadzu diffractometer (model XRD 6000) using (0.154?nm) radiation to generate diffraction patterns from the crystalline powder samples at ambient temperature over the range from 10° to 80°. Infrared spectra (280–4000?cm-1) were recorded using an FT-IR spectrometer (Perkin Elmer model 1650), with the samples pressed onto diamond-coated CsI pellets. Both the XRD and the FT-IR results were used to establish the crystallinity of the prepared cobalt ferrite powder at different calcination temperatures. The structural characteristics and particle size of the nanocrystalline powder were determined at room temperature by transmission electron micrograph (TEM) (JEOL 2010F UHR version electron microscope) operating at an accelerating voltage of 200?kV. Selected areas were obtained on the TEM images to ascertain both morphology and particle size distribution at different calcination temperatures. Magnetic characterization of the cobalt ferrite nanoparticles was performed by using a vibrating sample magnetometer (VSM) (Lake Shore 4700) at room temperature with a maximum magnetic field of 15?kOe.

3. Results and Discussion

The interactions between PVP and metal ions are represented schematically in Figure 1, which shows that the cobalt (II) and iron (III) ions are bound by the strong ionic bonds between the metallic ions and the amide group in a polymeric chain or between the polymeric chains.

This uniform immobilization of metallic ions in the cavities of the polymer chains favors the formation of a uniformly distributed, solid solution of the metallic oxides in the calcination process.

Figure 2 shows the XRD patterns of the different samples. A broad peak is revealed in the precursor (Figure 2(a)), which does not have sharp diffraction patterns and is still amorphous. The calcined samples at 673, 723, 823, and 923?K (ICDD PDF: 22-1086) show the reflection planes of (111), (220), (222), (311), (400), (422), (511), (440), and (533), which confirms the presence of cobalt ferrite with a face-centered cubic structure [18]. Our results show that, as the calcination temperature increases, the diffraction peaks become sharper and narrower, and their intensity increases. This indicates an intensification in crystallinity that originates from the increment of crystalline volume ratio due to the particle size enlargement of the nuclei [19]. The impure phase of -Fe2O3 is found in all calcined samples. This impurity occurs naturally as hematite [20].

The average crystallite size of calcined sample obtained at 923?K, for five planes with higher intensities that consist of (311), (440), (220), (511), and (400), was estimated as ?, which is in relatively good agreement with the bulk value of [21]. The average particle size also was determined from the full width at the half maximum (FWHM) of the XRD patterns, using the well-known Scherer formula: where D is the crystallite size (nm), is the full width of the diffraction line at half of the maximum intensity measured in radians, is the X-ray wavelength of ?nm, and is the Bragg angle [22]. The particle sizes estimated using the Scherer formula were found to increase with the calcination temperature, from about 10?nm at 673?K to about 41?nm at 923?K, as shown in Table 1.

Figure 3 shows the FT-IR spectra analysis with wave numbers between 280 and 4000?cm-1 for precursor and calcined samples. Figure 3(a) shows all absorption peaks in the precursor, which were attributed to PVP. The most important peaks are at 3345, 1638, 1430, 1230, 842, and 670?cm-1, corresponding to the stretching and bending vibrations of O–H, C=O, H–C–H, C–H, C–C, and C–N=O, respectively [23]. It must be mentioned that the absorption peaks of the nitrate anion overlap with vibration of C–H at 1230 and 1430?cm-1.

The cobalt ferrite samples that had been prepared were further studied for the interaction between the formation of the crystalline CoFe2O4 nanostructure and the PVP matrix at different calcination temperatures. The vibrational spectra of the absorption bands of pure spinel cobalt ferrite nanoparticles calcined at 823?K were observed at 334 and 545?cm-1, whereas the spectra for the calcined samples at 923?K were observed at 331 and 540?cm-1 (Figures 3(d) and 3(e)). This indicates the formation of the spinel CoFe2O4 nanostructure, as suggested by previously published data [6, 24]. The FT-IR absorption bands of solids are usually assigned to the vibration of ions in the crystal lattice [25]. The absence of the peaks at 1000–1300?cm-1 and 2000–3000?cm-1 in the samples at 823?K, and higher, confirmed the nonexistence of the O–H mode, C–O mode, and C=H stretching-mode of organic sources [26]. This FT-IR analysis is very useful for establishing the temperature of calcination at 823 and 923?K by removing the presence of unwanted ions, which may pollute the crystal lattice during preparation. At the lower temperature of 823?K, however, there is still a trace of a broadband absorption peak at 3397?cm-1 due to O–H stretching vibration (Figure 3(c)). The absorption bands of Co?O and Fe?O bonds appeared at 364 and 553?cm-1, respectively, for the calcined sample at 673?K. As the calcination temperature increased to 923?K, the absorption bands of Co?O and Fe?O bonds shifted to 331 and 540?cm-1, respectively. These bonds are typically associated with pure CoFe2O4 nanoparticles [6].

The TEM images and particle size distributions of cobalt ferrite samples are shown in Figure 4. The results indicate that the samples prepared by the thermal treatment method are uniform in both morphology and particle size distribution. The particle sizes increased with increasing calcination temperature, which is in good agreement with the XRD results (Table 1). The smallest particle size obtained in this study was 12.5?nm at 673?K, and particle size reached 39?nm at the highest calcination temperature of 923?K. This suggests that several neighboring particles fuse together to increase the particle sizes by the melting of their surfaces [27]. All organic materials are removed at 823?K (Figure 3(c)), and the particle size also is smaller than that in the sample calcined at 923?K (Figure 4(c)). This grain growth of particle size enlargement at higher calcination temperatures has previously been observed in zinc ferrite [28] and nickel ferrite [29] systems.

Figure 5 shows the () loops that were measured at room temperature in the range of approximately –15 to +15?kOe. Except for the precursor (Figure 5(a)), which was a nonmagnetic material, the calcined samples exhibited typical magnetic behaviors. It is evident in Table 1 that, when the calcinations temperature increases from 673 to 923?K, the saturation magnetization increases from 1.15 to 28.52?emu/g at room temperature. The largest saturation magnetization was 28.52?emu/g for the sample calcined at 923?K, which is much lower than that reported for the multi-domain, bulk cobalt ferrite (74.08?emu/g) [30]. The decrease in saturation magnetization of these samples, compared to that of bulk material, depends on different parameters. In the thermal treatment method, the heating rate of calcination is one of the most important parameters that can effectively increase or decrease the saturation magnetization. In this investigation, the heating rate of calcination was 10?K/min for cobalt ferrite nanoparticles calcined at 673, 723, 823, and 923?K, which was a relatively high heating rate. Therefore, it is possible that calcination at a slower heating rate would allow the crystallization to be more complete, and the magnetic phase could also increase, resulting in larger saturation magnetization.

Sangmanee and Maensiri [24] showed that saturation magnetization increases from 9.7 to 56.5?emu/g with decreasing the heating rate of calcination from 20?K/min to 5?K/min in cobalt ferrite nanostructures calcined at 773?K and fabricated by electrospinning. Also, the cation site occupancy in CoFe2O4 nanoparticles is different than in the bulk [31]. In fact, since the nanoparticles are the mixed spinel structure type rather than the inverse spinel structure type (bulk) because of the presence of Co3+ ions and also a cation distribution with cobalt ions on the tetrahedral site [32], the saturation magnetization is reduced [33].

In addition, the appearance of the weakly magnetic, impure phase of hematite (shown in Figure 2) can reduce the saturation magnetization [20, 34].The variations of saturation magnetization () and remanent magnetization () with particle size for cobalt ferrite nanoparticles are shown in Figure 6. The saturation magnetization and remanent magnetization values of the calcined samples increase with increasing particle size, which may be attributed to the surface effects in these nanoparticles.

The surface of the nanoparticles seems to be composed of some distorted or slanted spins that repel the core spins to align the field direction; consequently, the saturation magnetization and remanent magnetization increase for larger sizes and decrease for smaller sizes [35]. But the values of the coercivity field and remanence ratio have no similar relationship with saturation magnetization and remanent magnetization, because, when the particle size increases from 12.5 to 39?nm, the coercivity field and remanence ratio increase to 1791?Oe and 0.5 for 29?nm particle size then decreases to 1002?Oe and 0.407 for 39?nm particle size at room temperature, respectively (Figure 7).

The existence or absence of the different types of intergrain group exchanges is determined by the amount of that varies from 0 to 1 [36]. It has been reported that is for the particle interact by magnetostatic interaction, while is for randomly oriented noninteracting particles that undergo coherent rotations [37, 38]. Finally, confirms the existence of exchange-coupling particles. Therefore, the fact that the values of R for samples calcined at 673, 723, and 923?K are lower than 0.5 is attributed to particles that interact by magnetostatic interactions, and the calcined sample at 823?K, with , has randomly-oriented, non-interacting particles. The variation in the value of the coercivity field and remanence ratio with particle size can be explained on the basis of domain structure, critical size, and the anisotropy of the crystal [27, 3942]. It is worth mentioning that the magnetic properties of ferrite nanoparticles depend on the preparation method. For instance, 16-nm cobalt ferrite nanoparticles made by co-precipitation [27] give values of 6.8?emu/g , 1025?Oe , and 0.27 remanence ratio () at room temperature, whereas 13-nm cobalt ferrite nanoparticles made by the polymeric precursor method [11] give 67.5?emu/g , 1842?Oe , and 0.5 remanence ratio for similar conditions.

4. Conclusion

We have succeeded in synthesizing spinel cobalt ferrite (CoFe2O4) nanoparticles by a thermal treatment method utilizing only cobalt nitrate and iron nitrate as precursors, PVP as an agglomeration capping agent, and deionized water as a solvent. Particle sizes of 12.5–39?nm were obtained with calcination temperatures between 623 and 923?K, as confirmed by TEM and XRD analyses. Calcination at 823 and 923?K completely removed the organic compounds and nitrate ions. The magnetic studies showed that the saturation, magnetization, and remanent magnetization of the cobalt ferrite nanoparticles increased as temperature increased while the coercivity field and remanence ratio increased, until they achieved a maximum value and then decreased. This simple, cost-effective, and environmentally friendly method that produces no by-product effluents can be used to synthesize pure crystalline spinel cobalt ferrite nanoparticles. Furthermore, it can be extended to synthesizing other spinel ferrite nanoparticles of interest in nanotechnology.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Miss. Fatemeh Moazami Goodarzi for her great assistance in the chemical mechanism study. This work was supported by the Ministry of Higher Education of Malaysia under the FRGS grant and Universiti Putra Malaysia under the RUGS grant.