Issue 62, 2016

Interfacial effect on Mn-doped TiO2 nanoparticles: from paramagnetism to ferromagnetism

Abstract

Manganese-doped TiO2 nanoparticles with different crystalline structures, namely, anatase, rutile, mixed-phase of anatase and rutile, have been synthesized by a template method. We found that different structures lead to different defect concentrations and, as a result, strongly influence the magnetic properties. The pure anatase and rutile Mn-doped TiO2 are paramagnetic while the mixed-phase exhibits robust room temperature ferromagnetism. Extended X-ray absorption fine structure data reveal increasing oxygen vacancies when the mixed-phase formed. The key factor for activating ferromagnetism is found to be the interfacial defects created during phase-transformation, which is proposed to be oxygen vacancies. The defect effective Bohr radii are sufficiently large to overlap dopant ions, causing a net alignment of the dopant spins and then leading to a long-range ferromagnetic order. This discovery demonstrates that controlling the interfaces is an effective route to regulate magnetic properties and establish a prominent example of emergent phenomena at oxide interfaces.

Graphical abstract: Interfacial effect on Mn-doped TiO2 nanoparticles: from paramagnetism to ferromagnetism

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Mar 2016
Accepted
07 Jun 2016
First published
10 Jun 2016

RSC Adv., 2016,6, 57403-57408

Interfacial effect on Mn-doped TiO2 nanoparticles: from paramagnetism to ferromagnetism

L. Zhang, L. Zhu, L. Hu, Y. Li, H. Song and Z. Ye, RSC Adv., 2016, 6, 57403 DOI: 10.1039/C6RA06606B

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