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To induce intrinsic magnetism in the nominally nonmagnetic carbon materials containing only $s$ and $p$ electrons is an intriguing yet challenging task. Here, based on first-principles electronic structure calculations, we propose a universal approach inspired by Ovchinnikovs rule to guide us the design of a series of imaginative magnetic all-carbon structures. The idea is to combine the differently stacked graphene layers via the acetylenic linkages (-C$equiv$C-) to obtain a class of two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) carbon networks. With first-principles electronic structure calculations, we confirm the effectiveness of this approach via concrete examples of double-layer ALBG-C14, triple-layer ALTG-C22, and bulk IALG-C30. We show that these materials are antiferromagnetic (AFM) semiconductors with intralayer Neel and interlayer AFM couplings. According to the above idea, our work not only provides a promising design scheme for magnetic all-carbon materials, but also can apply to other $pi$-bonding network systems.
Triangular zigzag nanographenes, such as triangulene and its pi-extended homologues, have received widespread attention as organic nanomagnets for molecular spintronics, and may serve as building blocks for high-spin networks with long-range magnetic
Grain boundaries (GBs) are structural imperfections that typically degrade the performance of materials. Here we show that dislocations and GBs in two-dimensional (2D) metal dichalcogenides MX2 (M = Mo, W; X = S, Se) can actually improve the material
Based on first principles calculations, this study reveals that magnetism in otherwise non-magnetic materials can originate from the partial occupation of antibonding states. Since the antibonding wavefunctions are spatially antisymmetric, the spin w
Using the first-principles spin density functional approach, we have studied magnetism of a new type of all-carbon nanomaterials, i.e., the carbon nanowires inserted into the single-walled carbon nanotubes. It is found that if the 1D carbon nanowire
This paper presents an experimental and theoretical study of the distribution of carbon atoms in the octahedral interstitial sites of the face-centered cubic (fcc) phase of the iron-carbon system. The experimental part of the work consists of Mossbau