4.5 Article

Room temperature ferromagnetism in Sb doped ZnO

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmmm.2021.167908

Keywords

Sb-doped ZnO; Defects; Ferromagnetism; SQUID

Funding

  1. RGC, HKSAR [GRF 17302115]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Using first-principle calculations, the study investigates the magnetic properties of monovacancies and Sb-related defects in ZnO material. Experimental results confirm the ferromagnetic behavior predicted by the calculations, demonstrating the importance of defects containing V-Zn, V-O, Sb-Zn, Sb-O, Sb-Zn-V-Zn, and Sb-Zn-2V(Zn) in influencing magnetic properties.
Using first-principle calculations, the magnetic properties of the monovacancies and the Sb-related defects including V-Zn, V-O, Sb-Zn, Sb-O, Sb-Zn-V-Zn and Sb-Zn-2V(Zn) are studied. It is found that the isolated V-Zn with the charge state of 0 and 1 can contribute to ferromagnetism in ZnO material. The substitution of Sb on O sites (Sb-O(0)) also results in magnetic property. Moreover, the Sb-Zn-2V(Zn) complex is another defect having non-zero magnetic moment and energetically favors for the ferromagnetic state. The resultant density of states (DOS) and spin density distribution clearly show that the ferromagnetic interaction is majorly due to the O-p Zn-d and Sb-p states. To check this calculation, Sb-doped ZnO samples were grown by pulsed laser deposition with different Sb composition under P(O-2) = 1.3 Pa. SQUID study showed that all of these samples are ferromagnetic at room temperature. The variation of the saturation magnetization against the Sb composition is discussed.

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