TY - JOUR
T1 - Magnetic structures and dynamics of multiferroic systems obtained with neutron scattering
AU - Ratcliff, William
AU - Lynn, Jeffrey W.
AU - Kiryukhin, Valery
AU - Jain, Prashant
AU - Fitzsimmons, Michael R.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2016.
PY - 2016/7/27
Y1 - 2016/7/27
N2 - Multiferroics are materials that evince both ferroelectric and magnetic order parameters. These order parameters when coupled can lead to both exciting new physics as well as new device applications. Potential device applications include memory, magnetic field sensors, small antennas and so on. Since Kimura’s discovery of multiferroicity in TbMnO3, there has been a renaissance in the study of these materials. Great progress has been made in both materials discovery and in the theoretical understanding of these materials. In type-II systems the magnetic order breaks the inversion symmetry of the material, driving a secondary ferroelectric phase transition in which the ferroelectric polarisation is exquisitely coupled to the magnetic structure and thus to magnetic field. In type-I systems, the magnetic and ferroelectric orders are established on different sublattices of the material and typically are weakly coupled, but electric field can still drive changes in the magnetisation. Besides single-phase multiferroics, there has been exciting progress in composite heterostructures of multiferroics. Here, we review neutron measurements of prototypical examples of these different approaches to achieving multiferrocity.
AB - Multiferroics are materials that evince both ferroelectric and magnetic order parameters. These order parameters when coupled can lead to both exciting new physics as well as new device applications. Potential device applications include memory, magnetic field sensors, small antennas and so on. Since Kimura’s discovery of multiferroicity in TbMnO3, there has been a renaissance in the study of these materials. Great progress has been made in both materials discovery and in the theoretical understanding of these materials. In type-II systems the magnetic order breaks the inversion symmetry of the material, driving a secondary ferroelectric phase transition in which the ferroelectric polarisation is exquisitely coupled to the magnetic structure and thus to magnetic field. In type-I systems, the magnetic and ferroelectric orders are established on different sublattices of the material and typically are weakly coupled, but electric field can still drive changes in the magnetisation. Besides single-phase multiferroics, there has been exciting progress in composite heterostructures of multiferroics. Here, we review neutron measurements of prototypical examples of these different approaches to achieving multiferrocity.
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U2 - 10.1038/npjquantmats.2016.3
DO - 10.1038/npjquantmats.2016.3
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:84990922231
SN - 2397-4648
VL - 1
JO - npj Quantum Materials
JF - npj Quantum Materials
M1 - 16003
ER -