“…It is well known that low-field quasistatic (low frequency) magnetic susceptibility is caused by domain walls' displacements under an applied ac magnetic field. In general, the susceptibility is strongly affected by magnetic domain wall (DW) pinning by different types of sample defects: grains [30], twin and antiphase boundaries [11,23,31,32], nano/microinclusions [30,33] and atomic lattice defects [34]. The strongest pinning, and therefore the smallest susceptibility, are caused by defects whose mean size is comparable with the domain wall width [30,33,35,36].…”