Hard ferrite magnetic insulators revealing giant coercivity and sub-terahertz natural ferromagnetic resonance at 5–300 K†
Abstract
The temperature behavior of the magnetic properties is crucial for the application of magnetic materials. Recently, giant room temperature coercivities (20–36 kOe) and sub-terahertz natural ferromagnetic resonance (NFMR) frequencies (160–250 GHz) were observed for single-domain M-type hexaferrites with high aluminum substitution. Herein, the temperature dependences of the magnetic properties and natural ferromagnetic resonance are studied at 5–300 K for single-domain Sr1−x/12Cax/12Fe12−xAlxO19 (x = 1.5–5.5) particles. It is shown that the samples maintain their magnetic hardness over the whole temperature range. The coercivity and NFMR frequencies have a maximum shifting to the low-temperature region with a rise in aluminum concentration. The highest coercivity of 42 kOe and the maximum NFMR frequency of 297 GHz are observed for x = 5.5 at 180 K.