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Study Compares Effective Magnetic Moments of Different Multicore Nanoparticle Systems

Magnetic nanoparticles, a class of nanoparticles that can be manipulated by magnetic fields, have a wide range of technical and biomedical applications, including magnetic hyperthermia, targeted drug delivery, new magnetic storage media and nanorobots. Most commercial nanoparticles do not possess a single magnetic core but have a number of small magnetic crystals called crystallites.

The important question for researchers is how these crystallites behave inside a multicore nanoparticle and how they respond to an applied magnetic field. A paper in the Journal of Applied Physics, from AIP Publishing, compares the effective magnetic moments of different multicore nanoparticle systems and shows that they are magnetic-field dependent.

"The effective magnetic moment of such a multicore nanoparticle depends on various parameters, such as the size of magnetic crystallites, their packing density, core configuration and the magnetic interaction between them," said Frank Ludwig, one of the authors of the paper.

Many experimental findings indicate that the ensemble of crystallites behaves like a single magnetic core with some effective magnetic moment. Research has been directed toward determining how this effective magnetic moment is related to the number and size of crystallites inside one multicore nanoparticle because many applications require a large magnetic moment, which, e.g., determines the strength of the magnetic force needed for their manipulation.

The paper's findings are important for researchers optimizing magnetic nanoparticles for various applications, including magnetic hyperthermia and magnetic drug targeting, two new frontiers in cancer therapy.

In magnetic hyperthermia, the nanoparticles are located at the tumor cells. A magnetic field with a frequency and amplitude that will heat the nanoparticles to a temperature of approximately 42-44 degrees Celsius is applied, which kills the tumor cells.

In magnetic drug targeting, the capsule with drugs and magnetic particles is directed to the tumor by magnetic field gradients. When they arrive at the tumor, the drugs are released from the capsule by various techniques. Targeted drug therapy can result in dramatic reduction of doses and side effects versus traditional chemotherapy.

Technical applications of nanoparticles range from new magnetic storage media to nanorobots. Storage media made of nanoparticles are much smaller than existing media and can store greater amounts of data. Nanorobots are machines that can build and manipulate things precisely at an atomic level and can be used in a wide variety of contexts such as miniscule sensors that monitor blood chemistry.

Ludwig said continuing to gain a better understanding of the effective magnetic moment of multicore nanoparticles and, especially, its field dependence is essential for both basic science and applications.

The article, "Magnetic field dependence of the effective magnetic moment of multi-core nanoparticles," is authored by Tamara Kahmann and Frank Ludwig. The article will appear in the Journal of Applied Physics on June 16, 2020 (DOI: 10.1063/5.0011629). After that date, it can be accessed at https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/5.0011629.

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