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      Self-Assembly of Flux-Closure Polygons from Magnetite Nanocubes.

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          Abstract

          Well-defined nanoscale flux-closure polygons (nanogons) have been fabricated on hydrophilic surfaces from the face-to-face self-assembly of magnetite nanocubes. Uniform ferrimagnetic magnetite nanocubes (∼86 nm) were synthesized and characterized with a combination of electron microscopy, diffraction, and magnetization measurements. The nanocubes were subsequently cast onto hydrophilic substrates, wherein the cubes lined up face-to-face and formed a variety of polygons due to magnetostatic and hydrophobic interactions. The generated surfaces consist primarily of three- and four-sided nanogons; polygons ranging from two to six sides were also observed. Further examination of the nanogons showed that the constraints of the face-to-face assembly of nanocubes often led to bowed sides, strained cube geometries, and mismatches at the acute angle vertices. Additionally, extra nanocubes were often present at the vertices, suggesting the presence of external magnetostatic fields at the polygon corners. These nanogons are inimitable nanoscale magnetic structures with potential applications in the areas of magnetic memory storage and high-frequency magnetics.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Phys Chem Lett
          The journal of physical chemistry letters
          American Chemical Society (ACS)
          1948-7185
          1948-7185
          Sep 06 2012
          : 3
          : 17
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Chemistry, University of California-Irvine, Irvine, California 92697, United States.
          Article
          10.1021/jz300931s
          26292110
          f2a8a7f3-3039-4f3a-ab1f-56a9cbc7bff5
          History

          flux-closure rings,magnetic assembly,magnetite nanocubes,self-assembly

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