TY - JOUR
T1 - Unraveling the Origin of Magnetism in Mesoporous Cu-Doped SnO2 Magnetic Semiconductors
AU - Fan, Junpeng
AU - Menéndez, Enric
AU - Guerrero, Miguel
AU - Quintana, Alberto
AU - Weschke, Eugen
AU - Pellicer, Eva
AU - Sort, Jordi
PY - 2017/11/1
Y1 - 2017/11/1
N2 - © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. The origin of magnetism in wide-gap semiconductors doped with non-ferromagnetic 3d transition metals still remains intriguing. In this article, insights in the magnetic properties of ordered mesoporous Cu-doped SnO2 powders, prepared by hard-templating, have been unraveled. Whereas, both oxygen vacancies and Fe-based impurity phases could be a plausible explanation for the observed room temperature ferromagnetism, the low temperature magnetism is mainly and unambiguously arising from the nanoscale nature of the formed antiferromagnetic CuO, which results in a net magnetization that is reminiscent of ferromagnetic behavior. This is ascribed to uncompensated spins and shape-mediated spin canting effects. The reduced blocking temperature, which resides between 30 and 5 K, and traces of vertical shifts in the hysteresis loops confirm size effects in CuO. The mesoporous nature of the system with a large surface-to-volume ratio likely promotes the occurrence of uncompensated spins, spin canting, and spin frustration, offering new prospects in the use of magnetic semiconductors for energy-efficient spintronics.
AB - © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. The origin of magnetism in wide-gap semiconductors doped with non-ferromagnetic 3d transition metals still remains intriguing. In this article, insights in the magnetic properties of ordered mesoporous Cu-doped SnO2 powders, prepared by hard-templating, have been unraveled. Whereas, both oxygen vacancies and Fe-based impurity phases could be a plausible explanation for the observed room temperature ferromagnetism, the low temperature magnetism is mainly and unambiguously arising from the nanoscale nature of the formed antiferromagnetic CuO, which results in a net magnetization that is reminiscent of ferromagnetic behavior. This is ascribed to uncompensated spins and shape-mediated spin canting effects. The reduced blocking temperature, which resides between 30 and 5 K, and traces of vertical shifts in the hysteresis loops confirm size effects in CuO. The mesoporous nature of the system with a large surface-to-volume ratio likely promotes the occurrence of uncompensated spins, spin canting, and spin frustration, offering new prospects in the use of magnetic semiconductors for energy-efficient spintronics.
KW - Diluted magnetic semiconductors
KW - Mesoporous SnO particles 2
KW - Nanocasting
UR - http://www.mdpi.com/2079-4991/7/11/348
U2 - 10.3390/nano7110348
DO - 10.3390/nano7110348
M3 - Article
SN - 2079-4991
VL - 7
SP - 1
EP - 17
JO - Nanomaterials
JF - Nanomaterials
IS - 348
M1 - 348
ER -