Issue 48, 2009

Covalent-adsorption induced magnetism in graphene

Abstract

Magnetism and the mechanism of magnetic coupling in graphene decorated with monovalent and divalent adsorbates were investigated using first-principles calculations based on spin polarized density functional theory. The effects of adsorption concentration and the electronegativity of the adsorbate species on the magnetic and electronic properties were analyzed. For monovalent chemisorptions, the magnetic order originates from the instability of π electrons induced by the adsorption, opening a narrow energy gap and resulting in antiparallel spin directions on adjacent carbon atoms on the graphene sheet. The magnetic order is only possible for the separation between the adsorbing sites less than 10 Å. On the contrary, divalent chemisorptions cause long-range magnetic coupling, which is originated from the exchange interactions between localized nonbonding π electrons (spin-polarized) mediated by the conduction π electrons around the Fermi energy, similar to the sd interaction in transition metals. We demonstrate that our results are well consistent with recent experimental findings.

Graphical abstract: Covalent-adsorption induced magnetism in graphene

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 May 2009
Accepted
30 Sep 2009
First published
26 Oct 2009

J. Mater. Chem., 2009,19, 9274-9282

Covalent-adsorption induced magnetism in graphene

W. Li, M. Zhao, Y. Xia, R. Zhang and Y. Mu, J. Mater. Chem., 2009, 19, 9274 DOI: 10.1039/B908949G

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