Search for ferromagnetism in Mn-doped lead halide perovskites

Abstract Lead halide perovskites are new key materials in various application areas such as high efficiency photovoltaics, lighting, and photodetectors. Doping with Mn, which is known to enhance the stability, has recently been reported to lead to ferromagnetism below 25 K in methylammonium lead iod...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Maryam Sajedi, Chen Luo, Konrad Siemensmeyer, Maxim Krivenkov, Kai Chen, James M. Taylor, Marion A. Flatken, Florin Radu, Oliver Rader
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2023-04-01
Series:Communications Physics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-023-01178-0
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Summary:Abstract Lead halide perovskites are new key materials in various application areas such as high efficiency photovoltaics, lighting, and photodetectors. Doping with Mn, which is known to enhance the stability, has recently been reported to lead to ferromagnetism below 25 K in methylammonium lead iodide (MAPbI3) mediated by superexchange. Two most recent reports confirm ferromagnetism up to room temperature but mediated by double exchange between Mn2+ and Mn3+ ions. Here we investigate a wide concentration range of MAMn x Pb1−x I3 and Mn-doped triple-cation thin films by soft X-ray absorption, X-ray magnetic circular dichroism, and quantum interference device magnetometry. The X-ray absorption lineshape shows clearly an almost pure Mn2+ configuration, confirmed by a sum-rule analysis of the dichroism spectra. A remanent magnetization is not observed down to 2 K. Curie-Weiss fits to the magnetization yield negative Curie temperatures. All data show consistently that significant double exchange and ferromagnetism do not occur. Our results show that Mn is not suitable for creating ferromagnetism in lead halide perovskites.
ISSN:2399-3650