2007 APS March Meeting
Volume 52, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 5–9, 2007;
Denver, Colorado
Session N12: Focus Session: Diluted Magnetic Semiconductors I
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Wednesday, March 7, 2007
Colorado Convention Center
Room: Korbel 3C
Sponsoring
Units:
GMAG DMP FIAP
Chair: Ramin Abolfath, State University of New York at Buffalo
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.MAR.N12.1
Abstract: N12.00001 : Effects of co-doping on ferromagnetism in (Zn,Cr)Te.
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Shinji Kuroda
(Institute of Materials Science, University of Tsukuba)
Room-temperature ferromagnetism in semiconductors has emerged as
one of the
most challenging topics in today's materials science and
technology. Indeed,
enormous research activities have so far been directed towards
developing
ferromagnetic semiconductors with high transition temperatures.
Despite many
reports claiming high-temperature ferromagnetism for a broad
class of
diluted magnetic semiconductors, their intrinsic nature has
sometimes been
controversial[1], with a lack of elaborated analysis of
structural and
electronic properties.
Among them, Cr-doped ZnTe has been regarded as one of the promising
materials of room-temperature ferromagnetism because its
intrinsic nature
was confirmed through magnetic circular dichroism (MCD)
measurement[2]. In
this presentation, we report the effect of co-doping of charge
impurities on
ferromagnetic properties in this material. It was found that
ferromagnetism
was suppressed in (Zn,Cr)Te co-doped with nitrogen (N) as an
acceptor
impurity[3] and was enhanced in a crystal co-doped with iodine
(I) as a
donor impurity[4]. In particular, the apparent Curie temperature
$T_{C}$ of
Zn$_{1-x}$Cr$_{x}$Te with a Cr composition of $x$ = 0.05
increased up to 300K
at maximum due to I-doping, compared to $T_{C}\sim $30K in the
undoped
crystal. In the structural and compositional analysis using
TEM/EDS, it was
revealed that the origin of this remarkable effect of the
co-doping was the
variation of Cr distribution in the crystals; the Cr distribution
was
strongly inhomogeneous in I-doped crystals with higher $T_{C}$,
in contrast
to an almost uniform distribution in undoped or N-doped crystals
with lower
$T_{C}$ or being paramagnetic. In the crystals of inhomogeneous
distribution,
Cr-rich regions with a typical size of several ten nanometers
formed in the
Cr-poor matrix act as ferromagnetic nanoclusters, resulting in an
apparent
ferromagnetic behavior of the whole crystal. These variation of
the Cr
uniformity can be linked to a change in the Cr charge state due
to the
co-doping, which is considered to affect the aggregation energy
of Cr ions
in the host compound ZnTe[5]. These findings will open a new way
to control
the formation of magnetic nanoclusters in the semiconductor
matrix and
ferromagnetic properties by manipulating the charge state of
magnetic
impurities.
\newline
[1] see, $e.g.$ C. Liu \textit{et al.}, J. Mater. Sci.: Mater.
Electron. \textbf{16}, 555 (2005), S. A. Chambers \textit{et
al.}, Mater. Today \textbf{9}, 28 (2006).
\newline
[2] H. Saito \textit{et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{90},
207202 (2003).
\newline
[3] N. Ozaki \textit{et al.}, Appl. Phys. Lett. \textbf{87},
192116 (2005).
\newline
[4] N. Ozaki\textit{ et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{97},
037201 (2006).
\newline
[5] T. Dietl, Nature Mater. \textbf{5}, 673 (2006).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.MAR.N12.1