JOURNAL ARTICLE

Enhanced room temperature ferromagnetism in electrodeposited Co-doped ZnO nanostructured thin films by controlling the oxygen vacancy defects

A. SimimolAji A. AnapparaS. Greulich‐WeberP. ChowdhuryHarish C. Barshilia

Year: 2015 Journal:   Journal of Applied Physics Vol: 117 (21)   Publisher: American Institute of Physics

Abstract

We report the growth of un-doped and cobalt doped ZnO nanostructures fabricated on FTO coated glass substrates using electrodeposition method. A detailed study on the effects of dopant concentration on morphology, structural, optical, and magnetic properties of the ZnO nanostructures has been carried out systematically by varying the Co concentration (c.Co) from 0.01 to 1 mM. For c.Co ≤ 0.2 mM, h-wurtzite phase with no secondary phases of Co were present in the ZnO nanostructures. For c.Co ≤ 0.2 mM, the photoluminescence spectra exhibited a decrease in the intensity of ultraviolet emission as well as band-gap narrowing with an increase in dopant concentration. All the doped samples displayed a broad emission in the visible range and its intensity increased with an increase in Co concentration. It was found that the defect centers such as oxygen vacancies and zinc interstitials were the source of the visible emission. The X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies revealed, Co was primarily in the divalent state, replacing the Zn ion inside the tetrahedral crystal site of ZnO without forming any cluster or secondary phases of Co. The un-doped ZnO nanorods exhibited diamagnetic behavior and it remained up to a c.Co of 0.05 mM, while for c.Co > 0.05 mM, the ZnO nanostructures exhibited ferromagnetic behavior at room temperature. The coercivity increased to 695 G for 0.2 mM Co-doped sample and then it decreased for c.Co > 0.2 mM. Our results illustrate that up to a threshold concentration of 0.2 mM, the strong ferromagnetism is due to the oxygen vacancy defects centers, which exist in the Co-doped ZnO nanostructures. The origin of strong ferromagnetism at room temperature in Co-doped ZnO nanostructures is attributed to the s-d exchange interaction between the localized spin moments resulting from the oxygen vacancies and d electrons of Co2+ ions. Our findings provide a new insight for tuning the defect density by precisely controlling the dopant concentration in order to get the desired magnetic behavior at room temperature.

Keywords:
Materials science Photoluminescence Wurtzite crystal structure Dopant Doping X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy Analytical Chemistry (journal) Nanorod Ferromagnetism Band gap Cobalt Coercivity Paramagnetism Zinc Nanotechnology Chemical engineering Optoelectronics Chemistry Metallurgy

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36
Cited By
2.24
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
85
Refs
0.88
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Citation History

Topics

ZnO doping and properties
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Copper-based nanomaterials and applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Ga2O3 and related materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
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