Ferromagnetic Resonance in selected nanostructural materials designed for technological applications
G.V. Kurlyandskaya, S.M. Bhagat

TL;DR
This paper investigates ferromagnetic resonance in various nanostructured materials, including thin films, multilayers, and powders, to enhance their characterization for technological and biomedical applications.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive FMR study of FeNi nanocomposites, Co/GdCo multilayers, and nanoscale powders, advancing understanding of their magnetic properties for practical use.
Findings
FMR characterization reveals detailed magnetic behavior of nanostructures.
Enhanced microwave absorption observed in nanoscale powders.
Potential applications in biomedical and technological fields identified.
Abstract
During the past ten years nanostructures have been subject of active research. Fabrication of such systems follows well developed methods. The increase in the number of materials available for research and applications requires that the methods of their characterization be even more precise then before. Thin film structures have many advantages for technological applications because of compatibility with integrated circuit design. The magnetoimpedance, MI (change of impedance of a ferromagnet on application of a field) in 3-layered structures consisting of two magnetic layers separated by a non-magnetic conductive layer has been predicted to show high MI. In many cases the experimental values of MI effect are smaller than the theoretical predictions. Therefore, more careful characterization of the samples is a must. Accordingly, the first part of the present research deals with a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectromagnetic wave absorption materials
