1,707 research outputs found
First-Principles Study of Substitutional Metal Impurities in Graphene: Structural, Electronic and Magnetic Properties
We present a theoretical study using density functional calculations of the
structural, electronic and magnetic properties of 3d transition metal, noble
metal and Zn atoms interacting with carbon monovacancies in graphene. We pay
special attention to the electronic and magnetic properties of these
substitutional impurities and found that they can be fully understood using a
simple model based on the hybridization between the states of the metal atom,
particularly the d shell, and the defect levels associated with an
unreconstructed D3h carbon vacancy. We identify three different regimes
associated with the occupation of different carbon-metal hybridized electronic
levels:
(i) bonding states are completely filled for Sc and Ti, and these impurities
are non-magnetic;
(ii) the non-bonding d shell is partially occupied for V, Cr and Mn and,
correspondingly, these impurties present large and localized spin moments;
(iii) antibonding states with increasing carbon character are progressively
filled for Co, Ni, the noble metals and Zn. The spin moments of these
impurities oscillate between 0 and 1 Bohr magnetons and are increasingly
delocalized.
The substitutional Zn suffers a Jahn-Teller-like distortion from the C3v
symmetry and, as a consequence, has a zero spin moment. Fe occupies a distinct
position at the border between regimes (ii) and (iii) and shows a more complex
behavior: while is non-magnetic at the level of GGA calculations, its spin
moment can be switched on using GGA+U calculations with moderate values of the
U parameter.Comment: 13 figures, 4 tables. Submitted to Phys. Rev. B on September 26th,
200
Magnetism of Covalently Functionalized Carbon Nanotubes
We investigate the electronic structure of carbon nanotubes functionalized by
adsorbates anchored with single C-C covalent bonds. We find that, despite the
particular adsorbate, a spin moment with a universal value of 1.0 per
molecule is induced at low coverage. Therefore, we propose a mechanism of
bonding-induced magnetism at the carbon surface. The adsorption of a single
molecule creates a dispersionless defect state at the Fermi energy, which is
mainly localized in the carbon wall and presents a small contribution from the
adsorbate. This universal spin moment is fairly independent of the coverage as
long as all the molecules occupy the same graphenic sublattice. The magnetic
coupling between adsorbates is also studied and reveals a key dependence on the
graphenic sublattice adsorption site.Comment: final version, improved discussion about calculations and defect
concentratio
Magnetism of Substitutional Co Impurities in Graphene: Realization of Single -Vacancies
We report {\it ab initio} calculations of the structural, electronic and
magnetic properties of a graphene monolayer substitutionally doped with Co
(Co) atoms. We focus in Co because among traditional ferromagnetic
elements (Fe, Co and Ni), only Co atoms induce spin-polarization in
graphene. Our results show the complex magnetism of Co substitutional impurites
in graphene, which is mapped into simple models such as the -vacancy and
Heisenberg model. The links established in our work can be used to bring into
contact the engineering of nanostructures with the results of -models in
defective graphene. In principle, the structures considered here can be
fabricated using electron irradiation or Ar ion bombardment to create
defects and depositing Co at the same time
Electron transport through antidot superlattices in heterostructures: new magnetoresistance resonances in lattices with large diameter antidots
In the present work we have investigated the transport properties in a number
of Si/SiGe samples with square antidot lattices of different periods. In
samples with lattice periods equal to 700 nm and 850 nm we have observed the
conventional low-field commensurability magnetoresistance peaks consistent with
the previous observations in GaAs/AlGaAs and Si/SiGe samples with antidot
lattices. In samples with a 600 nm lattice period a new series of
well-developed magnetoresistance oscillations has been found beyond the last
commensurability peak which are supposed to originate from periodic skipping
orbits encircling an antidot with a particular number of bounds.Comment: To appear in EuroPhys. Let
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