4.7 Article

Magnetism and DFT calculations for understanding magnetic ground state of Fe doped Mn2O3

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLOYS AND COMPOUNDS
Volume 861, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jallcom.2020.158567

Keywords

DFT; Magnetism; Fe-doping; Mn2O3; Experimental

Funding

  1. Federal University of Sao Carlos
  2. Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte (PPGCEM/UFRN)
  3. State University of Ponta Grossa (UEPG)
  4. CAPES
  5. CNPq
  6. Fundacao Araucaria (Brazil)
  7. CNPq [156176/2018-1]
  8. PNPD/CAPES [2019/88887.319041]
  9. FAPESP [2013/07296-2]

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Experimental analysis and first-principles calculations were conducted to investigate the magnetic ground state of Fe-doped Mn2O3. Results showed that magnetic properties can be tuned with Fe concentration, as indicated by changes in hysteresis, magnetization, and magnetic susceptibility. The agreement between experimental and computational approaches further confirmed the impact of Fe doping on magnetic properties.
In the present work, we have carried out experimental analysis along with first-principles density functional theory (DFT) calculations to understand the magnetic ground state of Fe doped Mn2O3. The analysis of structural properties show that the orthorhombic type of crystal structure with space group Pcab is preserved, but the unit cell volume decreases with an increase in Fe concentration. Magnetic susceptibility measurements show that two antiferromagnetic transitions (T-N1 = 25 K, T-N2 = 80 K) for undoped Mn2O3 merged into one at around 35 K with increasing concentration of Fe doping (Mn2-xFexO3 ; x = 0; 0.20; 0.50; 0.75). M-H curve at 5 K exhibits small hysteresis around the origin. The magnitude of magnetization increases with the increasing concentration of Fe. M-H curve at 100 K shows the linear behavior of M concerning H for x = 0.20 and x = 0.50, indicating the paramagnetic state of the sample. As a complement to the experimental analysis, first-principles calculations using DFT were carried out. Fe doping was simulated by the corresponding substitution of Mn atoms to reproduce stoichiometric features of Mn2-xFexO3. The agreement between the two approaches suggests that the magnetic ground state of Fe doped Mn2O3 is tunable with Fe concentration. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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