Abstract
Hole-doped monolayer SnO has been recently predicted to be a ferromagnetic material, for a hole density typically above 5x1013/cm2. The possibility to induce a hole-doped stable ferromagnetic order in this two-dimensional material, either by intrinsic or extrinsic defects, is theoretically studied, using first-principles simulations. Sn vacancies and Sn vacancy-hydrogen complexes are predicted to be shallow acceptors, with relatively low formation energies in SnO monolayers grown under O-rich conditions. These defects produce spin-polarized gap states near the valence band-edge, potentially stabilizing the ferromagnetic order in 2D SnO. Hole-doping resulting from substitutional doping is also investigated. Among the considered possible dopants, As, substituting O, is predicted to produce shallow spin-polarized gap states near the valence band edge, also potentially resulting in a stable ferromagnetic order in SnO monolayers.
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CITATION STYLE
Houssa, M., Iordanidou, K., Pourtois, G., Afanas’Ev, V. V., & Stesmans, A. (2018). Ferromagnetism in two-dimensional hole-doped SnO. AIP Advances, 8(5). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5025272
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