Magnetism in Non-Traditional Materials
Abstract
We performed a systematic microscopic investigation of two completely dissimilar materials (namely, ZnO and rhombohedral-C{sub 60} polymers) exhibiting ferromagnetism in the presence of defects, and showed that this new phenomena has a common origin and the mechanism responsible can be used as a powerful tool for inducing and tailoring magnetic features in systems which are not magnetic otherwise. Based on our findings we proposed a general recipe for developing ferromagnetism in new materials of great technological interest. Our results support the role of complimentary pairs of defects in inducing magnetism in otherwise non-magnetic materials belonging to two widely differing classes with no apparent correlation between them. In both classes, ferromagnetism is found to be enhanced when the two kinds of defects form structures (pathways) of alternating effective donor and acceptor crystal sites leading to the development of electron charge and spin density like waves. Using ab initio density functional theory calculations we predicted the existence of a new class of carbon cages formed via hybrid connection between planar graphene sheets and carbon nanotubes. The resulting novel structure has the appearance of ?nano-drum? and offers the exciting prospect of integrating useful device properties of both graphene as well as the nanotubemore »
- Authors:
- Publication Date:
- Research Org.:
- University of Kentucky Research Foundation
- Sponsoring Org.:
- USDOE Office of Science (SC)
- OSTI Identifier:
- 1093258
- Report Number(s):
- DOE-ER45817
- DOE Contract Number:
- FG02-00ER45817
- Resource Type:
- Technical Report
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
- Subject:
- 75 CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS, SUPERCONDUCTIVITY AND SUPERFLUIDITY
Citation Formats
Menon, Madhu. Magnetism in Non-Traditional Materials. United States: N. p., 2013.
Web. doi:10.2172/1093258.
Menon, Madhu. Magnetism in Non-Traditional Materials. United States. doi:10.2172/1093258.
Menon, Madhu. Tue .
"Magnetism in Non-Traditional Materials". United States.
doi:10.2172/1093258. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1093258.
@article{osti_1093258,
title = {Magnetism in Non-Traditional Materials},
author = {Menon, Madhu},
abstractNote = {We performed a systematic microscopic investigation of two completely dissimilar materials (namely, ZnO and rhombohedral-C{sub 60} polymers) exhibiting ferromagnetism in the presence of defects, and showed that this new phenomena has a common origin and the mechanism responsible can be used as a powerful tool for inducing and tailoring magnetic features in systems which are not magnetic otherwise. Based on our findings we proposed a general recipe for developing ferromagnetism in new materials of great technological interest. Our results support the role of complimentary pairs of defects in inducing magnetism in otherwise non-magnetic materials belonging to two widely differing classes with no apparent correlation between them. In both classes, ferromagnetism is found to be enhanced when the two kinds of defects form structures (pathways) of alternating effective donor and acceptor crystal sites leading to the development of electron charge and spin density like waves. Using ab initio density functional theory calculations we predicted the existence of a new class of carbon cages formed via hybrid connection between planar graphene sheets and carbon nanotubes. The resulting novel structure has the appearance of ?nano-drum? and offers the exciting prospect of integrating useful device properties of both graphene as well as the nanotube into a single unit with tunable electronic properties. Creation of a hexagonal hole in the graphene portion of this structure results in significant magnetic moments for the edge atoms. The structure appears to be capable of sustaining ferrimagnetic state with the assistance of topological defects. The charge and spin distributions obtained in our calculations for the nano-drums are in striking contrast to those in planar graphene nanoribbons with a central hole. In this case, the central hole appears as the complimentary defect to those of the ribbon edges. Similar situation is found in case of the nano-drum in which the complimentary to the hole defects appear to be the pentagons along the curved surface of the drum. Charge oscillations found in the nano-drum are minimized in the nanoribbons. But more importantly, the hole edge atoms in the nano-drums retain significant magnetic moments; almost twice those of the corresponding ones in hydrogenated graphene nanoribbons (H-GNRs). These results suggest that the topological defects in the nano-drums may act like blocks to keep magnetic moments from ?leaking? out from the hole defects. This may have significant implications for the the use of nano-drums in magnetic storage technology where the ratio, magnetic-moment/weight, is of paramount importance in any futuristic device applications. One of the basic problems of the DFT/LSDA+U theory is the efficient evaluation of the U-term. With this in mind we proposed an alternative approach for its calculation which is based on the knowledge of the Hartree-Fock wave functions of the system under consideration. As a result, the proposed approach is closer to the basic definition of the DFT/LSDA+U scheme and its hybrid-DFT nature. According to our approach, the U value is obtained in a consistent and ab-initio way using the self-consistently calculated wave functions of the given system at the level of the HF approximation. Our method is applicable for systems which include more than one type of elements with localized d-orbitals. The method has been applied the case of the doped Zn(Co)O systems successfully. Currently, theories based on conventional superexchange or double-exchange interactions cannot explain long range magnetic order at concentrations below percolation threshold in dilute magnetic semiconductors. On the other hand, the codoping induced magnetism, which can justify magnetic interactions below percolation threshold, has eluded explanation. With this in mind, we proposed that defect-induced magnetism in codoped non-magnetic materials can be viewed within a molecular generalization of the atomic double-exchange and superexchange interactions applied to an arbitrary bipartite lattice hosted by (or embedded in) defect-free non-magnetic materials. In this view, the crucial factor for the development of magnetism appears to be the defect-complementarity of the codopants. We demonstrated this by taking ZnO and GaN (the most widely studied ferromagnetic oxide and nitride, respectively) as host materials and performing theoretical calculations using ab initio methods after codoping them with transition metal impurities for a variety of configurations. Our results indicate that the magnetic coupling among the induced and/or doped magnetic moments takes the form of an interaction among spin polarized molecular units which is facilitated by the formation of the hosted bipartite codopant structures. The universality of the proposed mechanism is further supported by earlier results referring to the rhombohedral C{sub 60}-based polymers},
doi = {10.2172/1093258},
journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {Tue Sep 17 00:00:00 EDT 2013},
month = {Tue Sep 17 00:00:00 EDT 2013}
}
-
Methodologies for estimating air emissions from three non-traditional source categories: Oil spills, petroleum vessel loading and unloading, and cooling towers. Final report, October 1991-March 1993
The report discusses part of EPA's program to identify and characterize emissions sources not currently accounted for by either the existing Aerometric Information Retrieval System (AIRS) or State Implementation Plan (SIP) area source methodologies and to develop appropriate emissions estimation methodologies and emission factors for a group of these source categories. Based on the results of the identification and characterization portions of this research, three source categories were selected for methodology and emission factor development: oil spills, petroleum vessel loading and unloading, and cooling towers. The report describes the category selection process and presents emissions estimation methodologies and emission factormore » -
Identification and characterization of five non-traditional-source categories: Catastrophic/accidental releases, vehicle repair facilities, recycling, pesticide application, and agricultural operations. Final report, September 1991-September 1992
The work is part of EPA's program to identify and characterize emissions sources not currently accounted for by either the existing Aerometric Information Retrieval System (AIRS) or State Implementation Plans (SIP) area source methodologies and to develop appropriate emissions estimation methodologies and emission factors for a group of these source categories. Based on the results of the identification and characterization portions of the research, five source categories were selected for methodology and emission factor development: catastrophic/accidental releases, vehicle repair facilities, recycling, pesticide application and agricultural operations. The report presents emissions estimation methodologies and emission factor data for the selected sourcemore » -
Determination of air toxic emissions from non-traditional sources in the puget sound region
The report was prepared for developing emission estimates for several selected non-traditional sources in the Puget Sound Region. The investigation consists of five source categories: Publicly Owned Treatment Works(POTW); Industrial Wastewater Treatment Plants; Superfund Clean-up Sites; Municipal Landfills; and Hazardous Waste Treatment Storage and Disposal Facilities (TSDFs). To ensure a broad review of non-traditional sources, emissions were to be estimated for facilities from each category. In evaluating emissions, no selected or limited list of toxic materials was used; however, almost all available analyses of waste waters were prepared to evaluate the presence of EPA's priority pollutant list. -
Monroe County non-traditional recycling energy efficiency demonstration project: Phase 3. Final report
Monroe County, New York undertook a demonstration project to expand its recycling program and quantify the energy savings that resulted from the expanded program. This report is the culmination of Phase 3, the program evaluation. The demonstration program, conducted from May 1995 to April 1996, involved 32,100 households in Monroe County or approximately 11.8% of the county population. The report includes an assessment of the non-traditional recyclable quantities received and marketed, determination of impacts on other collected recyclables, comparison of estimated energy use for the demonstration program vs. pre-demonstration recycling program, determination of revenues received from the demonstration program, evaluationmore »