Coupled spin states in armchair graphene nanoribbons with asymmetric zigzag edge extensions


Abstract in English

Carbon-based magnetic structures promise significantly longer coherence times than traditional magnetic materials, which is of fundamental importance for spintronic applications. An elegant way of achieving carbon-based magnetic moments is the design of graphene nanostructures with an imbalanced occupation of the two sublattices forming the carbon honeycomb lattice. According to Liebs theorem, this induces local magnetic moments that are proportional to the sublattice imbalance. Exact positioning of sublattice imbalanced nanostructures in graphene nanomaterials hence offers a route to control interactions between induced local magnetic moments and to obtain graphene nanomaterials with magnetically non-trivial ground states. Here, we show that such sublattice imbalanced nanostructures can be incorporated along a large band gap armchair graphene nanoribbon on the basis of asymmetric zigzag edge extensions, which is achieved by incorporating specifically designed precursor monomers during the bottom-up fabrication of the graphene nanoribbons. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy of an isolated and electronically decoupled zigzag edge extension reveals Hubbard-split states in accordance with theoretical predictions. Investigation of pairs of such zigzag edge extensions reveals ferromagnetic, antiferromagnetic or quenching of the magnetic interactions depending on the relative alignment of the asymmetric edge extensions. Moreover, a ferromagnetic spin chain is demonstrated for a periodic pattern of zigzag edge extensions along the nanoribbon axis. This work opens a route towards the design and fabrication of graphene nanoribbon-based spin chains with complex magnetic ground states.

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