Magnetic defects promote ferromagnetism in Zn1-xCoxO
Charles H. Patterson

TL;DR
This study investigates how various defects in Zn1-xCoxO influence its ferromagnetic properties, revealing that specific defects like neutral N and positively charged O vacancies promote ferromagnetic exchange between Co ions.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed computational analysis of defect-induced ferromagnetism in Zn1-xCoxO, highlighting the role of specific defects in mediating magnetic interactions.
Findings
Neutral N defect promotes ferromagnetic exchange between Co ions.
Positively charged O vacancy enhances ferromagnetic coupling.
Bulk Zn1-xCoxO with low defect density shows ferromagnetism only at low temperatures.
Abstract
Experimental studies of Zn1-xCoxO as thin films or nanocrystals have found ferromagnetism and Curie temperatures above room temperature and that p- or n-type doping of Zn1-xCoxO can change its magnetic state. Bulk Zn1-xCoxO with a low defect density and x in the range used in experimental thin film studies exhibits ferromagnetism only at very low temperatures. Therefore defects in thin film samples or nanocrystals may play an important role in promoting magnetic interactions between Co ions in Zn1-xCoxO. The electronic structures of Co substituted for Zn in ZnO, Zn and O vacancies, substituted N and interstitial Zn in ZnO were calculated using the B3LYP hybrid density functional in a supercell. The B3LYP functional predicts a band gap of 3.34 eV for bulk ZnO, close to the experimental value of 3.47 eV. Occupied minority spin Co 3d levels are at the top of the valence band and unoccupied…
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