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Magnetic Nanoparticles with Fe-N and Fe-C Cores and Carbon Shells Synthesized at High Pressures.

Rustem H BagramovVladimir P FilonenkoIgor P ZibrovElena A SkrylevaBoris A KulnitskiyVladimir D BlankValery N Khabashesku
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Nanoparticles of iron carbides and nitrides enclosed in graphite shells were obtained at 2 ÷ 8 GPa pressures and temperatures of around 800 °C from ferrocene and ferrocene-melamine mixture. The average core-shell particle size was below 60 nm. The graphite-like shells over the iron nitride cores were built of concentric graphene layers packed in a rhombohedral shape. It was found that at a pressure of 4 GPa and temperature of 800 °C, the stability of the nanoscale phases increases in a Fe 7 C 3 > Fe 3 C > Fe 3 N 1+x sequence and at 8 GPa in a Fe 3 C > Fe 7 C 3 > Fe 3 N 1+x sequence. At pressures of 2 ÷ 8 GPa and temperatures up to 1600 °C, iron nitride Fe 3 N 1+x is more stable than iron carbides. At 8 GPa and 1600 °C, the average particle size of iron nitride increased to 0.5 ÷ 1 μm, while simultaneously formed free carbon particles had the shape of graphite discs with a size of 1 ÷ 2 μm. Structural refinement of the iron nitride using the Rietveld method gave the best result for the space group P6 3 22. The refined composition of the samples obtained from a mixture of ferrocene and melamine at 8 GPa/800 °C corresponded to Fe 3 N 1.208 , and at 8 GPa/1650 °C to Fe 3 N 1.259 . The iron nitride core-shell nanoparticles exhibited magnetic behavior. Specific magnetization at 7.5 kOe of pure Fe 3 N 1.208 was estimated to be 70 emu/g. Compared to other methods, the high-pressure method allows easy synthesis of the iron nitride cores inside pure carbon shells and control of the particle size. And in general, pressure is a good tool for modifying the phase and chemical composition of the iron-containing cores.
Keyphrases
  • visible light
  • metal organic framework
  • iron deficiency
  • quantum dots
  • aqueous solution
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • mass spectrometry