Realizing new 2D spintronic materials from the non-magnetic 1T-PdO2 monolayer through vacancy defects and doping

RSC Adv. 2024 Feb 28;14(10):7241-7250. doi: 10.1039/d3ra08866a. eCollection 2024 Feb 21.

Abstract

In this work, vacancy- and doping-based magnetism engineering in a non-magnetic 1T-PdO2 monolayer is explored in order to realize new two-dimensional (2D) spintronic materials. The pristine monolayer is an indirect gap semiconductor with a band gap of 1.45 (3.20) eV obtained using the PBE (HSE06) functional. Half-metallicity with a total magnetic moment of 3.95 μB is induced by creating a single Pd vacancy, where the magnetic properties are produced mainly by O atoms around the vacancy site. In contrast, the non-magnetic nature is preserved under the effects of a single O vacancy, however a band gap reduction in the order of 37.93% is achieved. Further doping with transition metals (TMs = V, Cr, Mn, and Fe) in the Pd sublattice and with non-metals (B, C, N, and F) in the O sublattice is investigated. TM impurities lead to the emergence of a diluted magnetic semiconductor nature, where total magnetic moments of 1.00, 2.00, and 3.00 μB are obtained in the V-, Cr(Fe)-, and Mn-doped systems, respectively. In these cases, the TMs' 3d electrons mainly originate the system's magnetism. Significant magnetization of the PdO2 monolayer is also achieved by doping with B, N, and F atoms, where either half-metallic or diluted magnetic semiconductor natures are induced. Herein, electronic and magnetic properties are regulated mainly by the interactions between the 2p orbital of the dopant, 4d orbital of the first neighbor Pd atoms, and 2p orbital of the second neighbor O atoms. Meanwhile, C impurity induces no magnetism in the PdO2 monolayer because of the strong electronic hybridization with their neighbor atoms. Results presented herein may introduce efficient approaches to engineer magnetism in a non-magnetic PdO2 monolayer, such that the functionalized systems are further recommended for prospective spintronic applications.