2009 APS March Meeting
Volume 54, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 16–20, 2009;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session L30: Focus Session: Multiferroics I
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Room: 334
Sponsoring
Units:
DMP GMAG
Chair: Craig Fennie, Cornell University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.MAR.L30.1
Abstract: L30.00001 : Ferroelectric magnets: a Conical Spiral and an Ising Chain
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Young Jai Choi
(Rutgers University)
Multiferroics, where magnetic order with broken inversion
symmetry accompanies the occurrence of ferroelectric
polarization, can show remarkable tunability of dielectric
properties by applied magnetic fields, such as reversibly
flipping of ferroelectric polarization or a drastic change of
dielectric constant with fields. It turns out that the
origin of ferroelectricity in most of new multiferroics is spiral
magnetism that tends to produce uniform lattice distortions,
i.e., ferroelectric distortions, through antisymmetric exchange
coupling. Among such materials,
spinel CoCr$_{2}$O$_{4}$, exhibiting a conical-spiral spin order,
is unique in that it exhibits spontaneous magnetization as well
as electric polarization. We have studied the detailed switching
behavior of magnetoelectric domains, characterized by
polarization, magnetization, and magnetic wave vector,
under variation of temperature and applied magnetic fields. New
aspects that we have discovered from this study include [1]
polarization reversal at the magnetic lock-in transition
temperature (T$_{L})$ with thermal variation or
with isothermal variation of magnetic fields (without changing
their direction) at a temperature near T$_{L}$, [2] surprisingly,
this polarization reversal happens without change in spin
rotation direction in spiral spins.
We also present newly-discovered multiferroicity in a
``collinear'' chain magnet of Ca$_{3}$(Co,Mn)$_{2}$O$_{6}$. In
the Ising chain magnet, ``symmetric'' exchange coupling seems
responsible for the multiferroicity. We show that in
Ca$_{3}$Co$_{2-x}$Mn$_{x}$O$_{6}$ (x$\approx $1), the
ferroelectricity originates from the coexistence of the
alternating order of magnetic ions with different charges and the
collinear up-up-down-down spin order in the frustrated spin
chain. The system also exhibits magnetic freezing transitions
that affect the temperature dependence of the electric
polarization magnitude.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.MAR.L30.1