English

Nanosized superparamagnetic precipitates in cobalt-doped ZnO

Materials Science 2009-01-13 v2

Abstract

The existence of semiconductors exhibiting long-range ferromagnetic ordering at room temperature still is controversial. One particularly important issue is the presence of secondary magnetic phases such as clusters, segregations, etc... These are often tedious to detect, leading to contradictory interpretations. We show that in our cobalt doped ZnO films grown homoepitaxially on single crystalline ZnO substrates the magnetism unambiguously stems from metallic cobalt nano-inclusions. The magnetic behavior was investigated by SQUID magnetometry, x-ray magnetic circular dichroism, and AC susceptibility measurements. The results were correlated to a detailed microstructural analysis based on high resolution x-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and electron-spectroscopic imaging. No evidence for carrier mediated ferromagnetic exchange between diluted cobalt moments was found. In contrast, the combined data provide clear evidence that the observed room temperature ferromagnetic-like behavior originates from nanometer sized superparamagnetic metallic cobalt precipitates.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0803.3774,
  title  = {Nanosized superparamagnetic precipitates in cobalt-doped ZnO},
  author = {Matthias Opel and Karl-Wilhelm Nielsen and Sebastian Bauer and Sebastian T. B. Goennenwein and Rudolf Gross and Julio C. Cezar and Dieter Schmeisser and Juergen Simon and Werner Mader},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0803.3774},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

20 pages, 6 figures; details about background subtraction added to section III. (XMCD)

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:24:41.993Z