Search for Origin of Room Temperature Ferromagnetism Properties in Ni doped ZnO Nanostructure
Amit Kumar Rana, Yogendra Kumar, Parasmani Rajput, S. N. Jha, D., Bhattacharyya, Parasharam M. Shirage

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of room temperature ferromagnetism in Ni-doped ZnO nanostructures, revealing that Ni incorporation and oxygen vacancies contribute to magnetic properties through bound magnetic polarons.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis linking Ni doping, structural defects, and magnetic behavior in ZnO nanostructures, highlighting the role of VO+ in RT ferromagnetism.
Findings
Ni is incorporated as Ni2+ in ZnO.
Oxygen vacancies (VO+) are present and influence magnetic properties.
Weak ferromagnetism at room temperature increases with Ni doping.
Abstract
The origin of room temperature (RT) ferromagnetism (FM) in Ni doped ZnO samples are systematically investigated through physical, optical, and magnetic properties of nanostructure, prepared by simple low-temperature wet chemical method. Reitveld refinement of X-ray diffraction pattern displays an increase in lattice parameters with strain relaxation and contraction in Zn/O occupancy ratio by means of Ni-doping. Similarly scanning electron microscope demonstrates modification in the morphology from nanorods to nanoflakes with Ni doping, suggests incorporation of Ni ions in ZnO. More interestingly, XANES (X-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy) measurements confirm that Ni is being incorporated in ZnO as Ni2+. EXAFS (Extended X-ray Absorption Fine Structure) analysis reveals that structural disorders near the Zn sites in the ZnO samples upsurges with increasing Ni concentration. Raman…
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