Ultrasonication of toluene solutions of the heteropolynuclear cluster complex, Pt3Fe3(CO)15, in the presence of oleic acid and oleylamine affords surface-capped fcc FePt nanoparticles having an average diameter of ca. 2 nm. Self-assembled arrays of these nanoparticles on oxidized Si wafers undergo a fcc-to-fct phase transition at 775 degrees C to form ferromagnetic FePt nanocrystals ca. 5.8 nm in diameter well dispersed on the Si wafer surface. Room-temperature coercivity measurements of these annealed FePt nanoparticles confirm a high coercivity of ca. 22.3 kOe. Such high coercivity for fct FePt nanoparticles might result from use of a heterpolynuclear complex as a single-source precursor of Fe and Pt neutral atoms or from use of ultrasonication to form fcc FePt nanoparticles under conditions of exceptionally rapid heating. Experiments to determine the critical experimental conditions required to achieve such high room-temperature coercivities in ferromagnetic nanoparticles are underway.
A one-step synthesis of L10 FePt nanoparticles ca. 17.0 nm in diameter by reductive decomposition of
the single-source precursor, FePt(CO)4dppmBr2, on a water-soluble support (Na2CO3) is demonstrated.
Direct conversion of a FePt(CO)4dppmBr2/Na2CO3 composite to a L10 FePt/Na2CO3 nanocomposite occurs
at 600 °C under getter gas with metal-ion reduction and minimal nanoparticle coalescence. Triturating
the resulting nanocomposite with water simultaneously dissolves the sodium carbonate solid support and
precipitates the formed fct FePt nanoparticles. As-prepared FePt nanoparticles are ferromagnetic and
exhibit coercivities of 14.5 kOe at 300 K and 21.8 kOe at 5 K. When capped by functionalized
methoxypoly(ethylene glycol) surfactant molecules, as-prepared, polydisperse ferromagnetic FePt
nanoparticles can be dispersed and size-selected by fractional precipitation.
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