Abstract

We report here a tight-binding model study of frequency-dependent ferromagnetic spin susceptibility of the graphene system. The tight-binding Hamiltonian consists of electron hoppings up to third-nearest-neighbors, substrate and impurity effects in the presence of Coulomb interaction of electrons separately at two in-equivalent A and B sub-lattices of graphene. To calculate magnetic susceptibility, we calculate the two-particle electron Green’s functions by using Zubarev’s double time Green’s function technique. The electron occupations at A and B sub-lattices for both up and down spins are computed numerically and self-consistently. The frequency-dependent real part of ferromagnetic susceptibility of the system is computed numerically by taking [Formula: see text] grid points of the electron momentum. The susceptibility displays a sharp peak at the neutron momentum transfer energy at low energies and another higher energy resonance peak appearing at substrate-induced gap. The [Formula: see text]-peak shifts to a higher energy with the increase of momentum [Formula: see text]. The susceptibility shows that the high energy peak shifts to higher energies due to the corresponding increase of substrate-induced gap observed experimentally. It is observed that the Coulomb interaction suppresses the substrate-induced gap, but the impurity doping at A site enhances the substrate-induced gap, while doping at B site suppresses it.

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