| Literature DB >> 23844341 |
Boris B Straumal1, Svetlana G Protasova, Andrei A Mazilkin, Thomas Tietze, Eberhard Goering, Gisela Schütz, Petr B Straumal, Brigitte Baretzky.
Abstract
The influence of the grain boundary (GB) specific area s GB on the appearance of ferromagnetism in Fe-doped ZnO has been analysed. A review of numerous research contributions from the literature on the origin of the ferromagnetic behaviour of Fe-doped ZnO is given. An empirical correlation has been found that the value of the specific grain boundary area s GB is the main factor controlling such behaviour. The Fe-doped ZnO becomes ferromagnetic only if it contains enough GBs, i.e., if s GB is higher than a certain threshold value s th = 5 × 10(4) m(2)/m(3). It corresponds to the effective grain size of about 40 μm assuming a full, dense material and equiaxial grains. Magnetic properties of ZnO dense nanograined thin films doped with iron (0 to 40 atom %) have been investigated. The films were deposited by using the wet chemistry "liquid ceramics" method. The samples demonstrate ferromagnetic behaviour with J s up to 0.10 emu/g (0.025 μB/f.u.ZnO) and coercivity H c ≈ 0.03 T. Saturation magnetisation depends nonmonotonically on the Fe concentration. The dependence on Fe content can be explained by the changes in the structure and contiguity of a ferromagnetic "grain boundary foam" responsible for the magnetic properties of pure and doped ZnO.Entities:
Keywords: Fe; ZnO; ferromagnetism; grain boundaries
Year: 2013 PMID: 23844341 PMCID: PMC3701427 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.4.42
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1(a) Bright-field TEM micrograph of the nanograined pure ZnO thin film deposited on a sapphire substrate by the novel liquid ceramics method. Electron diffraction pattern (b) shows only rings from the ZnO wurtzite structure; no texture is visible. Bright spots originate from the sapphire substrate.
Figure 2Magnetization (calibrated in units of Bohr magnetons per formula unit of ZnO) at RT for ZnO thin films doped with 0.1 atom % Fe deposited on the sapphire substrate. The curve was obtained after subtracting the magnetic contribution from the substrate and the sample holder. The inset shows the magnified central part of the magnetisation curve.
Figure 3Dependence of the saturation magnetization Js (magnetic moment in units of Bohr magnetons per ZnO formula units) on the Fe concentration in ZnO nanograined polycrystals obtained by the “liquid ceramics” method.
Figure 4FM (full symbols) and para- or diamagnetic (open symbols) behaviour of Fe-doped ZnO in dependence on the specific GB area, sGB, the ratio of GB area to volume, at different preparation temperatures T. A vertical line marks the estimated threshold value sth. The enlarged symbol indicates the experimental data obtained by the authors’ own investigations (for symbols and references see the text).
Figure 5Dependence of the saturation magnetization (magnetic moment per iron atom in units of Bohr magnetons) on the Fe concentration in ZnO obtained by other methods such as magnetron sputtering (filled right- [38], up- [39], down- [40] and left-triangles [63]), solid-state reaction (filled squares [58]) and mechanical alloying (open circles [64]).