Magnetic Dissipation in Ferrofluids
Abstract
Ferrofluids, composed of magnetic nanoparticles suspended in a non-magnetic carrier liquid, have attracted considerable attention since their discovery in the 1960s. Their combination of liquid and magnetic properties gives rise to complex behaviors and unique functionalities, enabling a wide range of technological applications. Among these is the ability of the magnetic material to be moved by and to absorb heat when exposed to an external magnetic field -- a process that can occur through various dissipation mechanisms depending on the system. A detailed understanding of these mechanisms is crucial for tailoring materials to specific applications. We provide a comprehensive overview of the theoretical principles underlying different energy dissipation processes and propose a coherent framework for their interpretation. Particular attention is devoted to describing the frequency-dependent susceptibility, which is the key parameter to describe dissipation. We demonstrate that dissipation, predicted from magnetometry-based studies, matches well with direct, frequency-dependent calorimetric results, expanding the available frequency range of the characterization. The demonstrating measurements were carried out with a dilute ferrofluid containing magnetite nanoparticles of a mean diameter of 10.6 nm.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2506.05028,
title = {Magnetic Dissipation in Ferrofluids},
author = {Lili Vajtai and Norbert Marcel Nemes and Maria del Puerto Morales and Bence Gábor Márkus and László Forró and Ferenc Simon},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.05028},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
13 pages, 8 figures