Abstract
MnZn-ferrite has been prepared via high-energy ball milling of elemental oxides MnO, ZnO, and alpha-Fe2O3. Neutron diffraction measurements suggest a high density of vacancies in a spinel structure. The spinel phase appears to comprise 99.8 wt% of the material in the sample milled for 40 h, with the remainder attributable to unreacted alpha-Fe2O3. The x-ray absorption near-edge structure was analyzed to provide an understanding of the charge state of the constituent Fe ions. This analysis reveals about 2/3 of Fe cations to be trivalent, increasing to about 3/4 after a 5 h anneal at 450 degrees C. The heat treatment is also observed to induce a cation redistribution in the ball-milled ferrite toward that of a standard processed via ceramics methods. Results from Mossbauer spectroscopy determine the average hyperfine fields in the sample milled 40 h to be 289 and 487 kOe at 295 and 78 K, respectively. The average isomer shift is 0.32 mm/s at 295 K and 0.46 mm/s at 78 K, values which are typical of iron (III) in a spinel oxide lattice. As expected for a cubic-like environment, the quadrupole shifts are very small, ranging from 0.07 mm/s at 295 K to 0.00 mm/s at 78 K. (C) 1999 American Institute of Physics. [S0021-8979(99)76708-3].