A two-dimensional double-metal oxide MnCoO4 was predicted to be an intrinsic
ferromagnetic semiconductor by using density functional theory. The low
cleavage energy 0.36 Jm-2, which is similar to that of graphene, indicates that
it can be easily exfoliated. The bulk structure has an antiferromagnetic ground
state while the ferromagnetic configuration is the ground state against two
antiferromagnetic and three ferrimagnetic configurations in the two-dimensional
structure. The spin flip gaps for valence and conduction bands are 0.41 and
0.10 eV calculated with the HSE06 density functional, which are much larger
than the thermal energy at room temperature. The Curie temperature obtained
from the Monte Carlo simulation is 40 K. Under 9% tensile strain, the spin flip
gaps increase largely so that the spin flip can be suppressed. The direct
antiferromagnetic coupling between the Mn and Co atoms reduces largely while
the indirect ferromagnetic couplings between two Mn or two Co atoms mediated by
the O atoms do not decrease much in the stretched structure. The Curie
temperature increases to 230 K, higher than the dry ice temperature. Moreover,
phonon dispersion indicates that the MnCoO4 is also stable under the tensile
stain. Therefore, two-dimensional MnCoO4 could be a good candidate for
low-dimensional spintronics