Enhanced ultrafast optomagnetic effects in room-temperature ferromagnetic Pt nanoclusters embedded in silica by ion implantation

J. Bornacelli, C. Torres-Torres, J. Arenas-Alatorre, M. M. Martínez-Mondragón, L. Rodríguez-Fernández, A. Oliver

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ferromagnetic-like behavior at room temperature (300 K) was observed in Pt particles embedded in ion-implanted silica matrices. Results in samples integrated by ultra-small photoluminescent Pt clusters (<2 nm) were compared with samples containing exclusively larger plasmonic Pt nanoparticles (>3 nm). The ferromagnetic behavior coexists simultaneously with a diamagnetic response. Enhanced diamagnetic response of one order of magnitude was observed compared to typical diamagnetism in pure silica, and it is increased with the mean diameter of the Pt particles. Besides, a larger sensitivity to an external field was observed in the ferromagnetic response of the nanostructures with a characteristic saturation at 20 kOe. This ferromagnetic behavior was only observed in the samples with nucleated Pt particles. The magnitude of the saturation magnetization shows up to a fivefold increase in the samples with smaller particle size and larger particle density. Saturation magnetization was observed between 3-15 × 10-4 emu g-1, with remanent magnetization of 0.2-0.6 × 10-4emu g-1, measured at 300 K. Coercitive fields also decrease in samples with smaller size and particles density, with values of 114 and 300 Oe. At lower temperatures (5 K) the saturation magnetization increases, as it would be expected from a ferromagnetic state. Optomagnetic response was studied by inverse Faraday effects and induced photomagnetization with circular polarized picosecond pulsed light at 1064 nm wavelength. Results showed that samples with a stronger ferromagnetic response exhibit larger Faraday rotation up to 5.3 × 103deg cm-1 by light excitations with irradiances between 50 and 180 GW cm-2. These findings have immediate applications in multifunctional solid-state magneto-optical devices such as optical isolators, high-data storage devices and ultrafast all-optical switching of magnetization.

Original languageEnglish
Article number355705
JournalNanotechnology
Volume31
Issue number35
DOIs
StatePublished - 28 Aug 2020

Keywords

  • ferromagnetic Pt clusters
  • inverse faraday effect
  • ultrafast opto-magnetism

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