This study investigates the modulation of coercivity and magnetodielectric coupling in heat-treated, nickel-substituted lanthanum ferrite. LaFe0.7Ni0.3O3 samples were synthesized by high-energy ball milling and sintered at temperatures between 1073 and 1473 K. Chemical composition, crystalline structural evolution, surface morphology, magnetic, dielectric, and electrical properties, as well as magnetodielectric coupling, were analyzed. The XPS spectra revealed the presence of adsorbed oxygen, associated with the high oxygen affinity of the material. This behavior is interpreted as a charge-compensation mechanism, related both to the formation of oxygen vacancies and to the partial oxidation of Fe3+ to Fe4+. XRD and Rietveld refinement confirmed a single-phase orthorhombic Pnma structure, and structural simulations revealed progressive octahedral distortions with increasing temperature, affecting the octahedral tilting and electronic bandwidth. Magnetic characterization revealed that thermal processing modifies the magnetic behavior, inducing weak ferromagnetism and a significant increase in coercivity, correlating with progressive densification, greater domain stability, and reduced microstrain. Impedance measurements revealed magnetodielectric coupling, the Maxwell–Wagner interfacial polarization mechanism, and reduced dielectric losses. These findings demonstrate that the coercivity and magnetodielectric response in cationic nickel-substituted lanthanum ferrite can be tuned through thermal processing. A semi-empirical magnetocrystalline anisotropy model is proposed to explain the coercivity evolution and associated multiferroic behaviors, thus contributing to the study of functional ferrites as sustainable alternatives to rare-earth magnetic materials with potential in sensors and memory devices.
Téllez-Tovar et al. (Mon,) studied this question.