4.8 Article

Evidence of Charge-Transfer Ferromagnetism in Transparent Diluted Magnetic Oxide Nanocrystals: Switching the Mechanism of Magnetic Interactions

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 136, Issue 21, Pages 7669-7679

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja501888a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada through the Discovery and RTI grants
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)
  3. Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation
  4. Waterloo Institute for Nanotechnology (WIN)
  5. Canadian Light Source (CLS)
  6. NSERC
  7. NRC
  8. CIHR
  9. Province of Saskatchewan
  10. Western Economic Diversification Canada
  11. University of Saskatchewan

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We report the experimental evidence of a new form of room-temperature ferromagnetism in high surface area nanocrystalline manganese-doped In2O3, prepared from colloidal nanocrystals as building blocks. The nanocrystal structure (bixbyite or corundum) and assembly were controlled by their size, and the type and concentration of dopant precursors. The existence of substitutional paramagnetic Mn dopant ions in mixed valence states (Mn2+ and Mn3+) was confirmed and quantified by different spectroscopic methods, including X-ray absorption and magnetic circular dichroism. The presence of different oxidation states is the basis of ferromagnetism induced by Stoner splitting of the local density of states associated with extended structural defects, due to charge transfer from the Mn dopants. The extent of this charge transfer can be controlled by the relationship between the electronic structures of the nanocrystal host lattice and dopant ions, rendering a higher magnetic moment in bixbyite relative to corundum Mn-doped In2O3. Charge-transfer ferromagnetism assumes no essential role of dopant as a carrier of the magnetic moment, which was directly confirmed by X-ray magnetic circular dichroism, as an element-specific probe of the origin of ferromagnetism. At doping concentrations approaching the percolation limit, charge-transfer ferromagnetism can switch to a double exchange mechanism, given the mixed oxidation states of Mn dopants. The results of this work enable the investigations of the new mechanisms of magnetic ordering in solid state and contribute to the design of new unconventional magnetic and multifunctional materials.

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