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We report intrinsic ferromagnetism in monolayer electrides or electrenes, in which excess electrons act as anions. Our first-principles calculations demonstrate that magnetism in such electron-rich two-dimensional (2D) materials originates from the anionic electrons rather than partially filled d orbitals, which is fundamentally different from ferromagnetism found in other 2D intrinsic magnetic materials. Taking the honeycomb LaBr$_2$ (La$^{3+}$Br$^{-}_{2}cdot e^{-}$) as an example, our calculations reveal that the excess electron is localized at the center of the hexagon, which leads to strong Stoner-instability of the associated states at the Fermi energy, resulting in spontaneous magnetization and formation of a local moment. The overlap of extended tails of the wave functions of these electrons mediates a long-range ferromagnetic interaction, contributing to a Curie temperature ($T_textrm{c}$) of 235 K and a coercive field ($H_textrm{c}$) of 0.53 T, which can be further enhanced by hole doping. The dual nature, localization and extension, of the electronic states suggests a unique mechanism in such magnetic-element-free electrenes as intrinsic 2D ferromagnets.
The layers of a high-temperature novel GaAs:Fe diluted magnetic semiconductor (DMS) with an average Fe content up to 20 at. % were grown on (001) i-GaAs substrates using a pulsed laser deposition in a vacuum. The transmission electron microscopy (TEM
The amorphous iron-germanium system ($a$-Fe$_x$Ge$_{1-x}$) lacks long-range structural order and hence lacks a meaningful Brillouin zone. The magnetization of aFeGe is well explained by the Stoner model for Fe concentrations $x$ above the onset of ma
Magnetotransport and superconducting properties are investigated for uniformly La-doped SrTiO3 films and GdTiO3/SrTiO3 heterostructures, respectively. GdTiO3/SrTiO3 interfaces exhibit a high-density two-dimensional electron gas on the SrTiO3-side of
We observe interfacial ferromagnetism in superlattices of the paramagnetic metal LaNiO3 and the antiferromagnetic insulator CaMnO3. LaNiO3 exhibits a thickness dependent metal-insulator transition and we find the emergence of ferromagnetism to be coi
Results are presented of single crystal structural, thermodynamic, and reflectivity measurements of the double-perovskite Ba2NaOsO6. These characterize the material as a 5d^1 ferromagnetic Mott insulator with an ordered moment of ~0.2 Bohr magnetons