Magnetic Hysteresis Properties of Magnetite: Trends With Particle Size and Shape
Авторы: Paterson G., Moreno R., Muxworthy A., Tauxe L. et al
2024 г.
GGG
Magnetic hysteresis measurements are routinely made in the Earth and planetary sciences to identify geologically meaningful magnetic recorders, and to study variations in present and past environments.
Interpreting magnetic hysteresis data in terms of domain state and paleomagnetic stability are major motivations behind undertaking these measurements, but the interpretations remain fraught with challenges and ambiguities.
To shed new light on these ambiguities, we have undertaken a systematic micromagnetic study to quantify the magnetic hysteresis behavior of room‐temperature magnetite as a function of particle size (45–195 nm;
equivalent spherical volume diameter) and shape (oblate, prolate and equant); our models span uniformly
magnetized single domain (SD) to non‐uniformly magnetized single vortex (SV) states. Within our models the
reduced magnetization associated with SV particles marks a clear boundary between SD (≥0.5) and SV (<0.5)
magnetite. We further identify particle sizes and shapes with unexpectedly low coercivity and coercivity of
remanence. These low coercivity regions correspond to magnetite particles that typically have multiple possible
magnetic domain state configurations, which have been previously linked to a zone of unstable magnetic
recorders. Of all the hysteresis parameters investigated, transient hysteresis is most sensitive to particles that
exhibit such domain state multiplicity. When experimental transient hysteresis is compared to paleointensity
behavior, we show that increasing transience corresponds to more curved Arai plots and less accurate
paleointensity results. We therefore strongly suggest that transient behavior should be more routinely measured
during rock magnetic investigations.
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