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Alkaline earth atom doping-induced changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of graphene: a density functional theory study

Density functional theory was used to investigate the effects of doping alkaline earth metal atoms (beryllium, magnesium, calcium and strontium) on graphene. Electron transfer from the dopant atom to the graphene substrate was observed and was further probed by a combined electron localization funct...

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Autores principales: Serraon, Ace Christian F., Del Rosario, Julie Anne D., Abel Chuang, Po-Ya, Chong, Meng Nan, Morikawa, Yoshitada, Padama, Allan Abraham B., Ocon, Joey D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8694801/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35423162
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra08115a
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author Serraon, Ace Christian F.
Del Rosario, Julie Anne D.
Abel Chuang, Po-Ya
Chong, Meng Nan
Morikawa, Yoshitada
Padama, Allan Abraham B.
Ocon, Joey D.
author_facet Serraon, Ace Christian F.
Del Rosario, Julie Anne D.
Abel Chuang, Po-Ya
Chong, Meng Nan
Morikawa, Yoshitada
Padama, Allan Abraham B.
Ocon, Joey D.
author_sort Serraon, Ace Christian F.
collection PubMed
description Density functional theory was used to investigate the effects of doping alkaline earth metal atoms (beryllium, magnesium, calcium and strontium) on graphene. Electron transfer from the dopant atom to the graphene substrate was observed and was further probed by a combined electron localization function/non-covalent interaction (ELF/NCI) approach. This approach demonstrates that predominantly ionic bonding occurs between the alkaline earth dopants and the substrate, with beryllium doping having a variant characteristic as a consequence of electronegativity equalization attributed to its lower atomic number relative to carbon. The ionic bonding induces spin-polarized electronic structures and lower workfunctions for Mg-, Ca-, and Sr-doped graphene systems as compared to the pristine graphene. However, due to its variant bonding characteristic, Be-doped graphene exhibits non-spin-polarized p-type semiconductor behavior, which is consistent with previous works, and an increase in workfunction relative to pristine graphene. Dirac half-metal-like behavior was predicted for magnesium doped graphene while calcium doped and strontium doped graphene were predicted to have bipolar magnetic semiconductor behavior. These changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of alkaline earth doped graphene may be of importance for spintronic and other electronic device applications.
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spelling pubmed-86948012022-04-13 Alkaline earth atom doping-induced changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of graphene: a density functional theory study Serraon, Ace Christian F. Del Rosario, Julie Anne D. Abel Chuang, Po-Ya Chong, Meng Nan Morikawa, Yoshitada Padama, Allan Abraham B. Ocon, Joey D. RSC Adv Chemistry Density functional theory was used to investigate the effects of doping alkaline earth metal atoms (beryllium, magnesium, calcium and strontium) on graphene. Electron transfer from the dopant atom to the graphene substrate was observed and was further probed by a combined electron localization function/non-covalent interaction (ELF/NCI) approach. This approach demonstrates that predominantly ionic bonding occurs between the alkaline earth dopants and the substrate, with beryllium doping having a variant characteristic as a consequence of electronegativity equalization attributed to its lower atomic number relative to carbon. The ionic bonding induces spin-polarized electronic structures and lower workfunctions for Mg-, Ca-, and Sr-doped graphene systems as compared to the pristine graphene. However, due to its variant bonding characteristic, Be-doped graphene exhibits non-spin-polarized p-type semiconductor behavior, which is consistent with previous works, and an increase in workfunction relative to pristine graphene. Dirac half-metal-like behavior was predicted for magnesium doped graphene while calcium doped and strontium doped graphene were predicted to have bipolar magnetic semiconductor behavior. These changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of alkaline earth doped graphene may be of importance for spintronic and other electronic device applications. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021-02-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8694801/ /pubmed/35423162 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra08115a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Serraon, Ace Christian F.
Del Rosario, Julie Anne D.
Abel Chuang, Po-Ya
Chong, Meng Nan
Morikawa, Yoshitada
Padama, Allan Abraham B.
Ocon, Joey D.
Alkaline earth atom doping-induced changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of graphene: a density functional theory study
title Alkaline earth atom doping-induced changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of graphene: a density functional theory study
title_full Alkaline earth atom doping-induced changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of graphene: a density functional theory study
title_fullStr Alkaline earth atom doping-induced changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of graphene: a density functional theory study
title_full_unstemmed Alkaline earth atom doping-induced changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of graphene: a density functional theory study
title_short Alkaline earth atom doping-induced changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of graphene: a density functional theory study
title_sort alkaline earth atom doping-induced changes in the electronic and magnetic properties of graphene: a density functional theory study
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8694801/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35423162
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0ra08115a
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