4.5 Article

Temperature dependence and defect related structure, photoluminescence, (ferro)magnetism and ammonia sensitivity of un-doped nanocrystalline ZnO

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.mseb.2020.114748

Keywords

ZnO nanostructures; Microstructure; Photoluminescence; UV-vis; Electron paramagnetic resonance; XPS; FTIR; Room temperature ferromagnetism; Curie temperature; Native point defects; Extended defects

Funding

  1. CCDI-UEFISCDI [PN-III-P1-1.2-PCCDI-2017-0871, 47PCCDI/2018]
  2. Romanian Ministry of Research and Innovation [21N/08.02.2019, PN19-03]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

ZnO nanostructures with intrinsic and extended defects were prepared by rapid decomposition of zinc-propio-nate and annealing at 400 degrees C-970 degrees C. The correlation between the structure/morphology, type of native defects (photoluminescence (PL), EPR) and ferromagnetism was investigated, together with ammonia adsorption capacity. All the samples show room temperature ferromagnetism (RTFM). Crystallite size increases while the unit cell volume, c-axis constant, microstrain and saturation magnetization relax with increasing temperature; morphology varies from aggregated nanoparticles to frameworks of well-welded crystals. 400 degrees C-800 degrees C annealed samples show a broad visible and/or a prominent violet-blue PL emission and, two narrow g = 2.0065 and g = 1.9632 EPR signals. 800 degrees C-970 degrees C annealed samples exhibit very intense green-yellow photoluminescence. The intrinsic defects in conjunction with a deformed lattice and/or pinned by grain-boundaries appear responsible for RTFM and Curie temperature exceeding 700 degrees C. Tuning the morphology, PL intensity and ferromagnetic signal by choice of annealing temperature can find applications in (gas) sensing, photonic/optoelectronic and spintronic devices.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available