AIMagn Colloquia
Hyperfine Interactions at the Nanoscale
June 11, 2026
University of Genoa (IT) - Dept. of Chemistry and Industrial Chemistry
AIMagn Colloquia
Hyperfine Interactions at the Nanoscale
June 11, 2026
University of Genoa (IT) - Dept. of Chemistry and Industrial Chemistry
Hyperfine interactions at the nanoscale provide fundamental insight into the local magnetic, electronic, and structural environments of materials, playing a crucial role in fields such as condensed matter physics, nanotechnology, catalysis, and advanced magnetic materials. In this context, techniques such as Mössbauer spectroscopy offer a powerful tool to probe hyperfine interactions, enabling the investigation of oxidation states, magnetic ordering, and local symmetry with high sensitivity at the atomic scale.
The Workshop on “Hyperfine Interactions at the Nanoscale” aims at providing a platform to discuss and debate some of the most recent developments in the field. It includes a keynote lecture given by Dr. Jean-Marc Greneche (Le Mans University, France) on advanced spectroscopic approaches to probe hyperfine interactions in nanostructured systems, followed by a series of selected talks given by national and international experts on the topic.
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
00:00:20 Some Applications of 57Fe Mössbauer Spectrometry
Jean-Marc Greneche (Institut des Molécules et Matériaux du Mans, IMMM UMR CNRS 6283, Le Mans Université)
INVITED SPEAKERS
01:17:11 Magnetic Iron-Based Oxide Nano-structures with Complex Architectures: Insights from Mössbauer Spectrometry
Nader Yaacoub (Institut des Molécules et Matériaux du Mans, IMMM UMR CNRS 6283, Le Mans Université)
01:49:00 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance as a local probe of hyperfine interactions in hard magnetic materials and magnetic nanostructures
Samuele Sanna (Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Bologna)
02:32:20 Conversion and Emission Mössbauer Spectroscopy for Material Science
Roberto Mantovan (CNR-IMM, Unit of Agrate Brianza)
03:17:34 Fe vibrational modes of an iron spin triangle by synchrotron Nuclear Inelastic Scattering
Alberto Cini (Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Florence)