Room temperature magnetic order on zigzag edges of narrow graphene nanoribbons
Gabor Zsolt Magda, Xiaozhan Jin, Imre Hagymasi, Peter Vancso, Zoltan, Osvath, Peter Nemes-Incze, Chanyong Hwang, Laszlo P. Biro, Levente, Tapaszto

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that engineering zigzag edges in narrow graphene nanoribbons induces stable magnetic order at room temperature, with potential applications in spintronics.
Contribution
It shows that precise atomic-scale engineering of graphene edges with specific crystallographic orientation can produce robust magnetic order at room temperature.
Findings
Narrow zigzag graphene nanoribbons exhibit a bandgap of 0.2-0.3 eV due to edge spin ordering.
Magnetic coupling switches from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic with increasing ribbon width.
Magnetic order remains stable at room temperature, suitable for spintronic devices.
Abstract
Magnetic order emerging in otherwise non-magnetic materials as carbon is a paradigmatic example of a novel type of s-p electron magnetism predicted to be of exceptional high-temperature stability. It has been demonstrated that atomic scale structural defects of graphene can host unpaired spins. However, it is still unclear under which conditions long-range magnetic order can emerge from such defect-bound magnetic moments. Here we propose that in contrast to random defect distributions, atomic scale engineering of graphene edges with specific crystallographic orientation, comprising edge atoms only from one sub-lattice of the bipartite graphene lattice, can give rise to a robust magnetic order. We employ a nanofabrication technique based on Scanning Tunneling Microscopy to define graphene nanoribbons with nanometer precision and well-defined crystallographic edge orientations. While…
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