Abstract
We synthesized the solid solutions Cu3Bi(Se1–xTexO3)2O2Br (x = 0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1) for the first time and characterized their structures by X-ray diffraction (XRD) measurements and their magnetic properties by electron spin resonance (ESR), magnetic susceptibility, magnetization, and specific heat measurements as well as by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The Néel temperature TN and the critical field μ0HC needed for the metamagnetic transition increase with x, while the magnetization at a given magnetic field and the Curie–Weiss temperature Θ decrease with x. We show that the tendency for the interlayer antiferromagnetic (AFM) coupling in francisites is not explained by interlayer spin exchange but by the interlayer high-spin orbital interaction that occur across the van der Waals (vdW) gaps, hence indicating that francisites are vdW ferromagnets. This is surprising because, so far, well-established vdW ferromagnets are either layered tellurides or layered iodides. The trends in TN, μ0HC, and the magnetization of Cu3Bi(Se1–xTexO3)2O2Br as a function of x are well explained by the interlayer AFM interactions, and that in the Θ is explained by the intralayer spin exchanges. We proposed how one might modify francisites to make their interlayer interactions ferromagnetic (FM), hence leading to oxide vdW ferromagnets.
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