RESUMEN
Several experimental works currently demonstrate that metallic nano-oxides and carbon nanomaterials expected to be diamagnets, in fact, behave as ferromagnets at room temperature. More than scientifically intriguing, this unconventional and unexpected ferromagnetism pave the way for innovation products and novel nanotechnological applications, gathering the magnetism to interesting functionalities of these nanomaterials. Here, we investigate the non-conventional ferromagnetism observed at high temperatures in nanocrystalline cerium dioxide (CeO2or nanoceria) thin films that are optically transparent to visible light. Nanoceria exhibits several concrete applications in catalytic processes, photovoltaic cells, solid-state fuel cells, among others, which are mostly due to natural presence of oxygen vacancies and easy migration of the oxygen through the structure. The ferromagnetism in non-stoichiometric nanocrystaline ceria can be consistently described by ab initio electronic structure calculations, which support that oxygen vacancies cause the formation of magnetic moments and can provide a robust interconnectivity within magnetic polarons theoretical framework. Additionally, we present a conceptual model to account the oxygen transport to the non-conventional ferromagnetism at temperatures well above room temperature. The approach is complementary to the thermally-activated effective transfers of charge and spin around oxygen vacancy centers.
RESUMEN
In this work we present a detailed study of the anisotropic magnetic behavior of MnAs epilayers grown by molecular beam epitaxy on GaAs(001) and GaAs(111)B substrates. An extended approach of the Stoner-Wohlfarth model is used to simulate magnetic hysteresis loops of MnAs epilayers for temperatures around the magnetostructural phase transition. We demonstrate that magnetoelastic and magnetostrictive energy contributions to the magnetic free energy density are crucial to correctly describe the magnetization of both kinds of MnAs epilayers.
RESUMEN
We studied the structural, chemical and magnetic properties of non-doped ceria (CeO(2)) thin films electrodeposited on silicon substrates. Experimental results confirm that the observed room temperature ferromagnetism is driven by both cerium and oxygen vacancies. We investigated ceria films presenting vacancy concentrations well above the percolation limit. Irradiation experiments with neon ions were employed to generate highly oxygen defective CeO(2-δ) structures. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and x-ray absorption near-edge structure spectroscopy were used to estimate the concentration of Ce(3+) sites in the films, which can reach up to 50% of Ce(3+) replacing Ce(4+), compared to a stoichiometric CeO(2) structure. Despite the increment of structural disorder, we observe that the saturation magnetization continuously increases with Ce(3+) concentration. Our experiments demonstrate that the ferromagnetism observed in ceria thin films, highly disordered and oxygen-deficient, preserving the fluorite-type structure only in a nanometer scale, remains intrinsically stable at room temperature.