Electronic structure calculations from first-principles are employed to
design some new half-metallic fully-compensated ferrimagnets (or as they are
widely known half-metallic antiferromagnets) susceptible of finding
applications in spintronics. Cr2MnZ (Z= P, As, Sb, Bi) compounds have 24
valence electrons per unit cell and calculations show that their total spin
moment is approximately zero for a wide range of lattice constants in agreement
with the Slater-Pauling behavior for ideal half-metals. Simultaneously, the
spin magnetic moments of Cr and Mn atoms are antiparallel and the compounds are
ferrimagnets. Mean-field approximation is employed to estimate their Curie
temperature, which exceeds room temperature for the alloy with Sb. Our findings
suggest that Cr2MnSb is the compound of choice for further experimental
investigations. Contrary to the alloys mentioned above half-metallic
antiferromagnetism is unstable in the case of the Cr2FeZ (Z= Si, Ge, Sn)
alloys