4-8 July 2016
Kramer Law building
Africa/Johannesburg timezone
<a href="http://events.saip.org.za/internalPage.py?pageId=10&confId=86">The Proceedings of SAIP2016</a> published on 24 December 2017

Role of swift heavy ion irradiation on structural and magnetic properties of Ti<sub>0.95</sub>Co<sub>0.05</sub>O<sub>2-δ</sub> epitaxial thin films

5 Jul 2016, 16:10
1h 50m
Kramer Law building

Kramer Law building

UCT Middle Campus Cape Town
Board: A.207
Poster Presentation Track A - Division for Physics of Condensed Matter and Materials Poster Session (1)

Speaker

Dr PANKAJ MOHANTY (University of Johanneburg)

Abstract content <br> &nbsp; (Max 300 words)<br><a href="http://events.saip.org.za/getFile.py/access?resId=0&materialId=0&confId=34" target="_blank">Formatting &<br>Special chars</a>

Defects like oxygen vacancies are found to play a vital role in deciding the physical and magnetic properties of Ti0.95Co0.05O2-δ [1-3]. These defects can be created during growth or may be induced by ion irradiation. The role of such defects by depositing non-stoichiometric polycrystalline films, as well as by irradiating with swift heavy ions on structural and magnetic properties have been reported [4, 5]. In this work, the structural and magnetic properties of epitaxial thin films under dense electronic excitation are discussed. Films were deposited by pulsed laser deposition technique and the oxygen partial pressure during growth was kept at 10 mTorr. Reflections, beside those corresponding to the planes (004) and (008) of anatase phase of TiO2, are suppressed indicating epitaxial growth of the films along c-axis. In view of the important role of defects in manifestation of physical properties, films have been irradiated with 100 MeV Ag7+ ions with different fluences. X-ray diffraction of the irradiated films indicates successive amorphization of the films with increasing ion dose. The magnetic measurements indicate a significant enhancement of the magnetization of the film irradiated with fluence 1 × 1013 ions.cm-2. This unexpected increase in magnetization is explained on the basis of bound magnetic polaron (BMP) model. The findings suggest the pivotal role of ion irradiation on tailoring structural as well as magnetic properties.

References
[1] Matsumato Y et al. 2001 Science 291 854
[2] Rath C et al. 2009 J. Phys. D : Appl. Phys. 42 205101
[3] Mohanty P et al. 2012 J. Phys. D : Appl. Phys. 42 205101
[4] Mohanty P et al. 2014 J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 355 240
[5] Mohanty P et al. 2014 J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 47 315001

Would you like to <br> submit a short paper <br> for the Conference <br> Proceedings (Yes / No)?

Yes

Please indicate whether<br>this abstract may be<br>published online<br>(Yes / No)

Yes

Main supervisor (name and email)<br>and his / her institution

Prof. A R E Prinsloo, alettap@uj.ac.za, University of Johannesburg, PO Box 524, Auckland Park, 2006, South Africa

Level for award<br>&nbsp;(Hons, MSc, <br> &nbsp; PhD, N/A)?

N/A

Apply to be<br> considered for a student <br> &nbsp; award (Yes / No)?

No

Primary author

Dr PANKAJ MOHANTY (University of Johanneburg)

Co-authors

Prof. Aletta Prinsloo (University of Johannesburg) Prof. Chandana Rath (IIT (BHU), VARANASI, INDIA) Dr Charles Sheppard (Department of Physics, University of Johannesburg)

Presentation Materials

Peer reviewing

Paper