Abstract

Cadmium oxide powder codoped with Cu and Co ions (Cd0.94Cu0.01Co0.05O) was synthesised by thermal co-decomposition of a mixture of cadmium acetate dihydrate, bis(acetylacetonato)copper(II) and bis(acetylacetonato)cobalt(II) complexes. The purpose of the present investigation is to study the effect of H2-annealing conditions on the evolution of structure, optical and magnetic properties by varying temperature (300, 350 and 400 °C) and duration time (30 and 60 min). X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) methods confirm the purity and the formation of single nanocrystalline phase of the as-prepared powder; thus, both Cu and Co ions were incorporated into CdO lattice, forming solid solutions. Magnetic measurements reveal that the as-prepared solid solution (SS) gained paramagnetic (PM) properties, although pure CdO itself is considered as diamagnetic (DM). The measured effective magnetic moment of doped Co2+ was 3.55 μB. Interestingly, it was found that the hydrogenation process could transform the properties of the SS into room-temperature ferromagnetic (RT-FM) only. For example, the coercivity (Hc), remanence (Mr) and saturation magnetisation (Ms) were 279 Oe, 0.187 emu/g and 1.739 emu/g, respectively for SS annealed in H2 gas at 350 °C for 30 min. Thus, the possibility of producing CdO with RT-FM was proved, where the magnetic characteristics were tailored by doping and post treatment under H2 gas, thereby a new potential candidate to be used as a dilute magnetic semiconductor (DMS). However, the real effect of H2 annealing on such drastic transformation in the magnetic behaviour needs some in-depth theoretical research work.

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