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Tuning magnetism in graphene nanoribbons via strain and adatoms

Published 18 Jan 2025 in cond-mat.mes-hall | (2501.10801v1)

Abstract: We investigate the impact of strain and adsorbed H adatoms on the magnetic properties of zigzag graphene nanoribbons (ZGNRs) using a combination of tight-binding and density functional theory methods for both, ferromagnetic (FM) and antiferromagnetic edge configurations (AFM). Our study reveals that longitudinal strain induces a significant enhancement in the edge magnetic moment, that we attribute to strain-driven modifications in the band structure. In addition, we describe H~adatoms within the tight-binding approach by employing both an unrelaxed vacancy model and the Anderson impurity model. By comparing to density functional theory results, we corroborate that the Anderson impurity model is best suited to describe H adsorption. We then focus on the metallic FM edge configuration of the ZGNRs to better exploit the tuning of its properties. We find that the magnetic configuration of H~adatoms is strongly influenced by the edges, with an AFM coupling between edges and the H~adatom. In fact, the magnetic spatial pattern of the H adatom differs to that found in graphene due to this edge coupling. Importantly, we find robust discrete plateaus of integer magnetic moment as strain is varied in the defected ZGNRs, that we relate to changes in the band structure, namely, a half-metallic character or the opening of a gap. This behavior can be of interest for magnetic applications of carbon-based nanostructures

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