Nanosize zinc ferrite samples with an average particle size of 6–65 nm were prepared by a
new chemical reaction involving nitrates of Zn and Fe and investigated for magnetic
behaviour and defect structure. The sample with an average particle size of 6 nm has
considerable inversion in cation distribution as shown by its hysteresis loop and
increased magnetization. Mössbauer spectroscopy gives a single doublet for all the
samples. Mössbauer parameters like quadrupole splitting and linewidth change
sharply as the average particle size increases from 6 to 7 nm and then afterwards the
changes are slow. The total Mössbauer absorption, on the average, increases with
increase in particle size, the change from 6 to 65 nm being by a factor of 3. Positron
parameters too change sharply as the particle size varies. The changes are related to
inversion of the cation distribution, agglomeration of particles and annihilation at the
surface and in the interior. The picture that emerges from the lifetime studies
and supported by Mössbauer spectroscopy and magnetization studies suggests
that there are at least two characteristic particle size length scales for nanosize
ZnFe2O4
particles prepared by the nitrate route.
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