Abstract

Since most of the existing pristine two-dimensional (2D) materials are either intrinsically nonmagnetic or magnetic with small magnetic moment per unit cell and weak strength of magnetic coupling, introducing transition metal atoms in various nanosheets has been widely used for achieving a desired 2D magnetic material. However, the problem of surface clustering for the doped transition metal atoms is still challenging. Here we demonstrate via first-principles calculations that the recently experimentally characterized endohedral silicon cage V@Si12 clusters can construct two types of single cluster sheets exhibiting hexagonal porous or honeycomb-like framework with regularly and separately distributed V atoms. For the ground state of these two sheets, the preferred magnetic coupling is found to be ferromagnetic due to a free-electron-mediated mechanism. By using external strain, the magnetic moments and strength of magnetic coupling for these two sheets can be deliberately tuned, which would be propitious to their advanced applications. More attractively, our first-principles molecular dynamics simulations show that both the structure and strength of ferromagnetic coupling for the pristine porous sheet are stable enough to survive at room temperature. The insights obtained in this work highlight a new avenue to achieve 2D silicon-based spintronics nanomaterials.

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