Abstract

The evidence of oxygen and titanium (Ti) vacancy induced room-temperature ferromagnetism (RTFM) is observed in anatase TiO2 nanocrystals investigated by spectroscopic techniques. RTFM significantly depends on the annealing temperature due to modification of intrinsic defects. Magnetic moment (MS) and Curie temperature (TC) are found to increase initially with increase of annealing temperature and then decreases on further annealing. The samples annealed at lower temperature, is found to possess significant amount of singly ionized oxygen vacancy (VO+) defects. In addition, coincident doppler broadening and positron annihilation spectroscopic analysis provides an indication that such oxygen vacancy may merge with one or two Ti vacancy (VTi) and thereby forming larger-sized defect-combinations like divacancy VTi+O and trivacancy VTi+O+Ti which act as dominant positron trapping centre within the nanocrystalline TiO2. Hence, the combination of VO and VTi defects play the critical role in inducing RTFM in TiO2 nanocrystals which can yield promising spintronic applications.

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