Increase of magnetic hyperthermia efficiency due to dipolar interactions in low anisotropy magnetic nanoparticles : theoretical and experimental results
B. Mehdaoui, R. P. Tan, A. Meffre, J. Carrey, S. Lachaize, B. Chaudret, and M. Respaud

TL;DR
This paper investigates how magnetic interactions among low anisotropy magnetic nanoparticles can enhance hyperthermia efficiency, combining theoretical modeling and experimental measurements to understand the role of nanoparticle arrangements.
Contribution
It provides a combined theoretical and experimental analysis showing that magnetic interactions can increase hyperthermia efficiency in low anisotropy nanoparticles by promoting chain and column formations.
Findings
Magnetic interactions enhance heating power in low anisotropy MNPs.
Chain and column formations lead to rectangular hysteresis loops.
Interactions can reduce efficiency in non-chain forming structures.
Abstract
When magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) are single-domain and magnetically independent, their magnetic properties and the conditions to optimize their efficiency in magnetic hyperthermia applications are now well-understood. However, the influence of magnetic interactions on magnetic hyperthermia properties is still unclear. Here, we report hyperthermia and high-frequency hysteresis loop measurements on a model system consisting of MNPs with the same size but a varying anisotropy, which is an interesting way to tune the relative strength of magnetic interactions. A clear correlation between the MNP anisotropy and the squareness of their hysteresis loop in colloidal solution is observed : the larger the anisotropy, the smaller the squareness. Since low anisotropy MNPs display a squareness higher than the one of magnetically independent nanoparticles, magnetic interactions enhance their…
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