Unravelling atomic disorder and anti-site distortions in non-stoichiometric NiCo2O4 nanoparticles: a pathway to functional electronic and magnetic behaviour
Abstract
We report the impact of atomic disorder and Jahn–Teller (J–T) distortions in inverse spinel NiCo2O4 (NCO) nanoparticles synthesized via sol–gel combustion at elevated temperatures. Structural, optical, and electronic characterizations reveal cooperative J–T distortions driven by orbital degeneracy in Ni3+ cations, giving rise to local lattice distortions and electronic localization. UV-visible absorption spectroscopy confirms the semiconducting nature of the phase-stable NCO at room temperature. Site-specific cation distributions and charge states were probed through resonant photoemission spectroscopy (RPES) at the Ni and Co 3p–3d transitions, supported by core-level X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS). The presence of oxygen vacancies implies that non-stoichiometric growth contributes to intra- and inter-site electron-hopping mechanisms. RPES analysis reveals the partial localization of Ni 3d states and a more pronounced localization of Co 3d states, indicative of strong correlation effects. X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) measurements at the Ni and Co K-edges further elucidate the influence of anti-site disorder on the local atomic environment, revealing temperature-induced modifications in Ni–Co interatomic distances. These structural changes significantly affect magnetic interactions, particularly the antiferromagnetic exchange pathways mediated via the octahedral site, i.e., B-site cation disorder. These findings show the interplay between atomic disorder and electronic structure as well as magnetism in NCO, with implications for its functional applications in spintronics and photocatalysis.

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