2006 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2006;
Baltimore, MD
Session D7: New Results in Geometrically Frustrated Magnets
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Monday, March 13, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center
Room: 307
Sponsoring
Unit:
GMAG
Chair: Arthur Ramirez, Lucent Technologies
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.D7.5
Abstract: D7.00005 : Colossal magnetocapacitive effects in geometrically frustrated chalcogenide spinels
4:54 PM–5:30 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Peter Lunkenheimer
(Center for Electronic Correlations and Magnetism, University of Augsburg, Germany)
It is well known that the spinel structure is susceptible to the occurrence
of geometrical frustration, which in the past was invoked to explain a
number of unusual observations concerning the magnetic and orbital degrees
of freedom in these materials. We demonstrate that several chalcogenide
spinels also exhibit very unusual dielectric behavior, especially an
extremely strong coupling of magnetic and dielectric properties and the
simultaneous occurrence of magnetic and polar order. Especially, in
CdCr$_{2}$S$_{4}$ a colossal magnetocapacitive effect is observed, which
shows up as a sharp upturn of the dielectric constant \textit{$\varepsilon $}' when the sample
becomes ferromagnetic and as a variation of \textit{$\varepsilon $'} up to a factor of 30 when the
sample is subjected to external magnetic fields. As revealed by linear and
non-linear dielectric measurements, this material shows the typical
signatures of relaxor ferroelectrics, i.e. a strong increase of the static
dielectric constant with decreasing temperature and considerable frequency
dispersion of the complex permittivity. While in most relaxor ferroelectrics
the freezing of polar moments is driven by frustrated interactions related
to substitutional disorder, in the present pure system geometrical
frustration seems a plausible mechanism to explain the relaxor behavior.
However, one may also speculate on completely different mechanisms of
ferroelectric polarization, e.g., the ordering of electronic degrees of
freedom. The concomitant occurrence of polar and magnetic order makes
CdCr$_{2}$S$_{4}$ another example of the rare species of multiferroic
materials. In contrast to other members of this group of materials, it has
sizable ordering temperatures and moments. A detailed investigation of the
relaxational dynamics in this material provides clear evidence that the
observed magnetocapacitive effect stems from an enormous acceleration of the
relaxation dynamics induced by the development of magnetic order. In
addition, recent results reveal even larger magnetocapacitive effects in
In-doped CdCr$_{2}$S$_{4}$.
In addition to CdCr$_{2}$S$_{4}$, we found similar effects also in
ferromagnetic CdCr$_{2}$Se$_{4}$ and, most astonishing, in
HgCr$_{2}$S$_{4}$, which exhibits a complex type of antiferromagnetic
magnetic order at low temperatures. In the latter system, the
magnetocapacitive effect, exemplified by the relative increase of
\textit{$\varepsilon $'} in a field of 5~T, reaches values up to 8$\times $10$^{5}$~{\%}.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.D7.5