Exchange coupled core-shell nanoparticles present high potential to tune adequately the magnetic properties for specific applications such as nanomedicine or spintronics. Here, we report on the design of core-shell nanoparticles by performing the successive thermal decomposition of Fe and Co complexes. Depending on the thermal stability and the concentration of the Co precursor, we were able to control the formation of a hard ferrimagnetic (FiM) Co-ferrite shell or an antiferromagnetic (AFM) CoO shell at the surface of a soft FiM Fe3-δO4 core.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFemtosecond laser pulses can be used to induce ultrafast changes of the magnetization in magnetic materials. However, one of the unsolved questions is that of conservation of the total angular momentum during the ultrafast demagnetization. Here we report the ultrafast transfer of angular momentum during the first hundred femtoseconds in ferrimagnetic Co0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA precise control and understanding of the magnetization dynamics of nanostructures is an important topic in applied nanosciences. Herein, we perform such control by annealing crystalline (Co/core)-(Pt/shell) nanoparticles. Using electron tomography, temperature dependent electron microscopy and time-resolved magneto-optics, we establish a clear correlation between the magnetization dynamics and the crystalline structure of the nanoparticles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor an isolated quantum particle, such as an electron, the orbital (L) and spin (S) magnetic moments can change provided that the total angular momentum of the particle is conserved. In condensed matter, an efficient transfer between L and S can occur owing to the spin-orbit interaction, which originates in the relativistic motion of electrons. Disentangling the absolute contributions of the orbital and spin angular momenta is challenging, however, as any transfer between the two occurs on femtosecond timescales.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing femtosecond optical spectroscopy, we study the ultrafast dynamics of the surface plasmon polaritons in gold arrays of subwavelength holes. A large time dependent spectral broadening and shift of the surface plasmon resonances are reported. The experimental results are modeled by the diffraction of a transverse electromagnetic field through the nanostructure, taking into account both the electron dynamics near the interband transitions and the Drude-like conductivity of the metal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF