Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Alberto López-Ortega is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Alberto López-Ortega.


Physics Reports | 2015

Applications of exchange coupled bi-magnetic hard/soft and soft/hard magnetic core/shell nanoparticles

Alberto López-Ortega; Marta Estrader; German Salazar-Alvarez; Alejando G. Roca; Josep Nogués

A B S T R A C T The applications of exchange coupled bi-magnetic hard/soft and soft/hard ferromagnetic core/shell nanoparticles are reviewed. After a brief description of the main synthesis approaches and the core/shell structural-morphological characterization, the basic static and dynamic magnetic properties are presented. Five different types of prospective applications, based on diverse patents and research articles, are described: permanent magnets, recording media, microwave absorption, biomedical applications and other applications. Both the advantages of the core/shell morphology and some of the remaining challenges are discussed.


Nature Communications | 2013

Robust antiferromagnetic coupling in hard-soft bi-magnetic core/shell nanoparticles

Marta Estrader; Alberto López-Ortega; S. Estradé; Igor V. Golosovsky; German Salazar-Alvarez; Marianna Vasilakaki; K. N. Trohidou; M. Varela; D. C. Stanley; M. Sinko; M. J. Pechan; D. J. Keavney; F. Peiró; S. Suriñach; M.D. Baró; J. Nogués

The growing miniaturization demand of magnetic devices is fuelling the recent interest in bi-magnetic nanoparticles as ultimate small components. One of the main goals has been to reproduce practical magnetic properties observed so far in layered systems. In this context, although useful effects such as exchange bias or spring magnets have been demonstrated in core/shell nanoparticles, other interesting key properties for devices remain elusive. Here we show a robust antiferromagnetic (AFM) coupling in core/shell nanoparticles which, in turn, leads to the foremost elucidation of positive exchange bias in bi-magnetic hard-soft systems and the remarkable regulation of the resonance field and amplitude. The AFM coupling in iron oxide-manganese oxide based, soft/hard and hard/soft, core/shell nanoparticles is demonstrated by magnetometry, ferromagnetic resonance and X-ray magnetic circular dichroism. Monte Carlo simulations prove the consistency of the AFM coupling. This unique coupling could give rise to more advanced applications of bi-magnetic core/shell nanoparticles.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Size-dependent passivation shell and magnetic properties in antiferromagnetic/ferrimagnetic core/shell MnO nanoparticles.

Alberto López-Ortega; Dina Tobia; E. Winkler; Igor V. Golosovsky; German Salazar-Alvarez; S. Estradé; Marta Estrader; Jordi Sort; Miguel Angel González; S. Suriñach; Jordi Arbiol; F. Peiró; R. D. Zysler; Maria Dolors Baró; Josep Nogués

The magnetic properties of bimagnetic core/shell nanoparticles consisting of an antiferromagnetic MnO core and a ferrimagnetic passivation shell have been investigated. It is found that the phase of the passivation shell (gamma-Mn(2)O(3) or Mn(3)O(4)) depends on the size of the nanoparticles. Structural and magnetic characterizations concur that while the smallest nanoparticles have a predominantly gamma-Mn(2)O(3) shell, larger ones have increasing amounts of Mn(3)O(4). A considerable enhancement of the Néel temperature, T(N), and the magnetic anisotropy of the MnO core for decreasing core sizes has been observed. The size reduction also leads to other phenomena such as persistent magnetic moment in MnO up to high temperatures and an unusual temperature behavior of the magnetic domains.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2010

Synthesis of compositionally graded nanocast NiO/NiCo2O4/Co3O4 mesoporous composites with tunable magnetic properties

Moisés Cabo; Eva Pellicer; Emma Rossinyol; Marta Estrader; Alberto López-Ortega; J. Nogués; Onofre Castell; S. Suriñach; Maria Dolors Baró

A series of mesoporous NiO/NiCo2O4/Co3O4 composites has been synthesized by nanocasting using SBA-15 silica as a hard template. The evaporation method was used as the impregnation step. Nickel and cobalt nitrates in different Ni(II) : Co(II) molar ratios were dissolved in ethanol and used as precursors. The composites show variable degrees of order, from randomly organized nanorods to highly ordered hexagonally-packed nanowires as the Ni(II) : Co(II) molar ratio decreases. The materials exhibit moderately large surface areas in the 60–80 m2 g−1 range. Their magnetic properties, saturation magnetization (MS) and coercivity (HC), can be easily tuned given the ferrimagnetic (NiCo2O4) and antiferromagnetic (NiO and Co3O4) character of the constituents. Moreover, the NiCo2O4 rich materials are magnetic at room temperature and consequently can be easily manipulated by small magnets. Owing to their appealing combination of properties, the nanocomposites are expected to be attractive for myriad applications.


Nanoscale | 2012

Strongly exchange coupled inverse ferrimagnetic soft/hard, MnxFe3−xO4/FexMn3−xO4, core/shell heterostructured nanoparticles

Alberto López-Ortega; M. Estrader; German Salazar-Alvarez; S. Estradé; Igor V. Golosovsky; Randy K. Dumas; D. J. Keavney; Marianna Vasilakaki; K. N. Trohidou; Jordi Sort; F. Peiró; S. Suriñach; M.D. Baró; Josep Nogués

Inverted soft/hard, in contrast to conventional hard/soft, bi-magnetic core/shell nanoparticles of Mn(x)Fe(3-x)O(4)/Fe(x)Mn(3-x)O(4) with two different core sizes (7.5 and 11.5 nm) and fixed shell thickness (∼0.6 nm) have been synthesized. The structural characterization suggests that the particles have an interface with a graded composition. The magnetic characterization confirms the inverted soft/hard structure and evidences a strong exchange coupling between the core and the shell. Moreover, larger soft core sizes exhibit smaller coercivities and loop shifts, but larger blocking temperatures, as expected from spring-magnet or graded anisotropy structures. The results indicate that, similar to thin film systems, the magnetic properties of soft/hard core/shell nanoparticles can be fine tuned to match specific applications.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Two-, three-, and four-component magnetic multilayer onion nanoparticles based on iron oxides and manganese oxides.

German Salazar-Alvarez; Hans Lidbaum; Alberto López-Ortega; Marta Estrader; Klaus Leifer; Jordi Sort; S. Suriñach; Maria Dolors Baró; Josep Nogués

Magnetic multilayered, onion-like, heterostructured nanoparticles are interesting model systems for studying magnetic exchange coupling phenomena. In this work, we synthesized heterostructured magnetic nanoparticles composed of two, three, or four components using iron oxide seeds for the subsequent deposition of manganese oxide. The MnO layer was allowed either to passivate fully in air to form an outer layer of Mn(3)O(4) or to oxidize partially to form MnO|Mn(3)O(4) double layers. Through control of the degree of passivation of the seeds, particles with up to four different magnetic layers can be obtained (i.e., FeO|Fe(3)O(4)|MnO|Mn(3)O(4)). Magnetic characterization of the samples confirmed the presence of the different magnetic layers.


Ultramicroscopy | 2012

EEL spectroscopic tomography: Towards a new dimension in nanomaterials analysis

Lluís Yedra; Alberto Eljarrat; Raul Arenal; Eva Pellicer; Moisés Cabo; Alberto López-Ortega; Marta Estrader; Jordi Sort; Maria Dolors Baró; S. Estradé; F. Peiró

Electron tomography is a widely spread technique for recovering the three dimensional (3D) shape of nanostructured materials. Using a spectroscopic signal to achieve a reconstruction adds a fourth chemical dimension to the 3D structure. Up to date, energy filtering of the images in the transmission electron microscope (EFTEM) is the usual spectroscopic method even if most of the information in the spectrum is lost. Unlike EFTEM tomography, the use of electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) spectrum images (SI) for tomographic reconstruction retains all chemical information, and the possibilities of this new approach still remain to be fully exploited. In this article we prove the feasibility of EEL spectroscopic tomography at low voltages (80 kV) and short acquisition times from data acquired using an aberration corrected instrument and data treatment by Multivariate Analysis (MVA), applied to Fe(x)Co((3-x))O(4)@Co(3)O(4) mesoporous materials. This approach provides a new scope into materials; the recovery of full EELS signal in 3D.


Micron | 2012

Distinguishing the core from the shell in MnOx/MnOy and FeOx/MnOx core/shell nanoparticles through quantitative electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) analysis

S. Estradé; Ll. Yedra; Alberto López-Ortega; Marta Estrader; German Salazar-Alvarez; M.D. Baró; Josep Nogués; F. Peiró

The structural and chemical characterization of inverted bi-magnetic MnO(x)(antiferromagnetic)/MnO(y)(ferrimagnetic) and FeO(x)(soft-ferrimagnetic)/MnO(x)(hard-ferrimagnetic) core/shell nanoparticles has been carried out by means of scanning transmission electron microscopy with electron energy loss spectroscopy analysis, (S)TEM-EELS. Quantitative EELS was applied to assess the local composition of the nanoparticles by evaluating the local Mn oxidation state based on the Mn L₃/L₂ peak intensity ratio and the Mn L₃ peak onset. The analysis allows to unambiguously distinguish the core from the shell and to determine the nature of the involved manganese oxides in both cases. The results evidence that the structure of the nanoparticles is, in fact, more complex than the one designed by the synthesis parameters.


Nanoscale | 2014

Direct evidence for an interdiffused intermediate layer in bi-magnetic core–shell nanoparticles

Amélie Juhin; Alberto López-Ortega; M. Sikora; Claire Carvallo; Marta Estrader; S. Estradé; F. Peiró; Maria Dolors Baró; Philippe Sainctavit; Pieter Glatzel; J. Nogués

Core-shell nanoparticles attract continuously growing interest due to their numerous applications, which are driven by the possibility of tuning their functionalities by adjusting structural and morphological parameters. However, despite the critical role interdiffused interfaces may have in the properties, these are usually only estimated in indirect ways. Here we directly evidence the existence of a 1.1 nm thick (Fe,Mn)3O4 interdiffused intermediate shell in nominally γ-Fe2O3-Mn3O4 core-shell nanoparticles using resonant inelastic X-ray scattering spectroscopy combined with magnetic circular dichroism (RIXS-MCD). This recently developed magneto-spectroscopic probe exploits the unique advantages of hard X-rays (i.e., chemical selectivity, bulk sensitivity, and low self-absorption at the K pre-edge) and can be advantageously combined with transmission electron microscopy and electron energy loss spectroscopy to quantitatively elucidate the buried internal structure of complex objects. The detailed information on the structure of the nanoparticles allows understanding the influence of the interface quality on the magnetic properties.


Nano Letters | 2016

3D Visualization of the Iron Oxidation State in FeO/Fe3O4 Core–Shell Nanocubes from Electron Energy Loss Tomography

Pau Torruella; Raul Arenal; Francisco de la Peña; Zineb Saghi; Lluís Yedra; Alberto Eljarrat; Lluís López-Conesa; Marta Estrader; Alberto López-Ortega; German Salazar-Alvarez; Josep Nogués; Caterina Ducati; Paul A. Midgley; F. Peiró; S. Estradé

The physicochemical properties used in numerous advanced nanostructured devices are directly controlled by the oxidation states of their constituents. In this work we combine electron energy-loss spectroscopy, blind source separation, and computed tomography to reconstruct in three dimensions the distribution of Fe(2+) and Fe(3+) ions in a FeO/Fe3O4 core/shell cube-shaped nanoparticle with nanometric resolution. The results highlight the sharpness of the interface between both oxides and provide an average shell thickness, core volume, and average cube edge length measurements in agreement with the magnetic characterization of the sample.

Collaboration


Dive into the Alberto López-Ortega's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. Estradé

University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F. Peiró

University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Josep Nogués

Catalan Institute of Nanotechnology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Nogués

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jordi Sort

Autonomous University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maria Dolors Baró

Autonomous University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. Suriñach

Autonomous University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alejandro G. Roca

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge