English

Stable room temperature magnetic graphite

Materials Science 2007-05-23 v1

Abstract

Carbon materials are attracting increasing attention due to the novelty of the associated physical properties and the potential applications in high-tech devices. The possibility to achieve outstanding properties in macroscopic carbon materials opens up a profusion of new striking applications. Magnetic properties induced by defects on graphite structures, such as pores, edges of the planes and topological defects, have been theoretically predicted. The possible coexistence of sp3 and sp2 bonds have been also invoked to predict this behavior (for a review, see ref. 1). Some reports have proved the existence of weak ferromagnetic-like magnetization loops in highly-oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) (ref. 2-3). Very recently two reports showed that the existence of ferromagnetism in pure carbon is unambiguously possible (ref. 4-5). Here we report on a novel and inexpensive chemical route consistent in a controlled etching on the graphite structure to obtain macroscopic amounts of magnetic pure graphite. This material has a strong magnetic response even at room temperature where it can be attracted by a commercial magnet and would be the experimental confirmation for the defect induced magnetism previously predicted.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.cond-mat/0407303,
  title  = {Stable room temperature magnetic graphite},
  author = {H. Pardo and F. M. Araujo-Moreira and R. Faccio and O. F. de Lima and A. J. C. Lanfredi and C. A. Cardoso and E. R. Leite and G. Zanelatto and A. W. Mombru},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cond-mat/0407303},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

10 pages, 4 figures