212 research outputs found

    Weak ferromagnetism and internal magnetoelectric effect in LiFeP2_2O7_7

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    The magnetic, thermodynamic, and pyroelectric properties of LiFeP2_2O7_7 single crystals are investigated with emphasis on the magnetoelectric interaction of the electrical polarization with the magnetic order parameter. The magnetic order below TN_N\simeq 27 K is found to be a canted antiferromagnet with a weak ferromagnetic component along the bb-axis. A sharp peak of the pyroelectric current at TN_N proves the strong internal magnetoelectric interaction resulting in a sizable polarization decrease at the onset of magnetic order. The magnetoelectric effect in external magnetic fields combines a linear and a quadratic field dependence below TN_N. Thermal expansion data show a large uniaxial magnetoelastic response and prove the existence of strong spin lattice coupling. LiFeP2_2O7_7 is a polar compound with a strong interaction of the magnetic order parameter with the electric polarization and the lattice.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Dynamical magnetoelectric effects in multiferroic oxides

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    Multiferroics with coexistent ferroelectric and magnetic orders can provide an interesting laboratory to test unprecedented magnetoelectric responses and their possible applications. One such example is the dynamical and/or resonant coupling between magnetic and electric dipoles in a solid. As the examples of such dynamical magnetoelectric effects, (1) the multiferroic domain wall dynamics and (2) the electric-dipole active magnetic responses are discussed with the overview of recent experimental observations.Comment: 15 pages including 6 figures; Accepted for publication in Phil. Trans. A Roy. Soc. (Special issue, Spin on Electronics

    Instability in magnetic materials with dynamical axion field

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    It has been pointed out that the axion electrodynamics exhibits instability in the presence of a background electric field. We show that the instability leads to a complete screening of an applied electric field above a certain critical value and the excess energy is converted into a magnetic field. We clarify the physical origin of the screening effect and discuss its possible experimental realization in magnetic materials where magnetic fluctuations play the role of the dynamical axion field.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; v2: minor editin

    Temperature-Dependent Magnetoelectric Effect from First Principles

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    We show that nonrelativistic exchange interactions and spin fluctuations can give rise to a linear magnetoelectric effect in collinear antiferromagnets at elevated temperatures that can exceed relativistic magnetoelectric responses by more than 1 order of magnitude. We show how symmetry arguments, ab initio methods, and Monte Carlo simulations can be combined to calculate temperature-dependent magnetoelectric susceptibilities entirely from first principles. The application of our method to Cr2O3 gives quantitative agreement with experiment.

    Magnetic-field-induced switching between ferroelectric phases in orthorhombic-distortion-controlled RRMnO3_{3}

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    We have investigated the dielectric and magnetic properties of Eu0.595_{0.595}Y0.405_{0.405}MnO3_{3} withoutwithout the presence of the 4ff magnetic moments of the rare earth ions, and have found two ferroelectric phases with polarization along the aa and cc axes in a zero magnetic field. A magnetic field induced switching from one to the other ferroelectric phase took plase in which the direction of ferroelectric polarization changed from the a axis to the c axis by the application of magnetic fields parallel to the a axis. In contrast to the case of TbMnO3_{3}, in which the 4ff moments of Tb3+^{3+} ions play an important role in such a ferroelectric phase switching, the magnetic-field-induced switching between ferroelectric phases in Eu0.595_{0.595}Y0.405_{0.405}MnO3_{3} does not originate from the magnetic transition of the rare-earth 4ff moments, but from that of the Mn 3dd spins.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, RevTeX4, Proceedings of MMM 2005, to appear in J. Appl. Phy

    First-principles approach to lattice-mediated magnetoelectric effects

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    We present a first-principles scheme for the computation of the magnetoelectric response of magnetic insulators. The method focuses on the lattice-mediated part of the magnetic response to an electric field, which we argue can be expected to be the dominant contribution in materials displaying a strong magnetoelectric coupling. We apply our method to Cr2O3, a relatively simple and experimentally well studied magnetoelectric compound.Comment: 4 pages with 1 figure embedded. More information at http://www.icmab.es/dmmis/leem/jorg

    Solid State Systems for Electron Electric Dipole Moment and other Fundamental Measurements

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    In 1968, F.L. Shapiro published the suggestion that one could search for an electron EDM by applying a strong electric field to a substance that has an unpaired electron spin; at low temperature, the EDM interaction would lead to a net sample magnetization that can be detected with a SQUID magnetometer. One experimental EDM search based on this technique was published, and for a number of reasons including high sample conductivity, high operating temperature, and limited SQUID technology, the result was not particularly sensitive compared to other experiments in the late 1970's. Advances in SQUID and conventional magnetometery had led us to reconsider this type of experiment, which can be extended to searches and tests other than EDMs (e.g., test of Lorentz invariance). In addition, the complementary measurement of an EDM-induced sample electric polarization due to application of a magnetic field to a paramagnetic sample might be effective using modern ultrasensitive charge measurement techniques. A possible paramagnetic material is Gd-substituted YIG which has very low conductivity and a net enhancement (atomic enhancement times crystal screening) of order unity. Use of a reasonable volume (100's of cc) sample of this material at 50 mK and 10 kV/cm might yield an electron EDM sensitivity of 103310^{-33} e cm or better, a factor of 10610^6 improvement over current experimental limits.Comment: 6 pages. Prepared for ITAMP workshop on fundamental physics that was to be held Sept 20-22 2001 in Cambride, MA, but was canceled due to terrorist attack on U.S New version incorporates a number of small changes, most notably the scaling of the sensitivity of the Faraday magnetometer with linewidth is now treated in a saner fashion. The possibility of operating at an even lower temperarture, say 10 microkelvin, is also discusse

    Analysis of optical magnetoelectric effect in GaFeO_3

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    We study the optical absorption spectra in a polar ferrimagnet GaFeO_3. We consider the E1, E2 and M1 processes on Fe atoms. It is shown that the magnetoelectric effect on the absorption spectra arises from the E1-M1 interference process through the hybridization between the 4p and 3d states in the noncentrosymmetry environment of Fe atoms. We perform a microscopic calculation of the spectra on a cluster model of FeO_6 consisting of an octahedron of O atoms and an Fe atom displaced from the center with reasonable values for Coulomb interaction and hybridization. We obtain the magnetoelectric spectra, which depend on the direction of magnetization, as a function of photon energy in the optical region 1.0-2.5 eV, in agreement with the experiment.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure

    Theoretical prediction of multiferroicity in double perovskite Y2_2NiMnO6_6

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    We put forward double perovskites of the R2_2NiMnO6_6 family (with RR a rare-earth atom) as a new class of multiferroics on the basis of {\it ab initio} density functional calculations. We show that changing RR from La to Y drives the ground-state from ferromagnetic to antiferromagnetic with \uparrow\uparrow\downarrow\downarrow spin patterns. This E^*-type ordering breaks inversion symmetry and generates a ferroelectric polarization of few μC/cm2\mu C/cm^2. By analyzing a model Hamiltonian we understand the microscopic origin of this transition and show that an external electric field can be used to tune the transition, thus allowing electrical control of the magnetization.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Neel state of antiferromagnet as a result of a local measurement in the distributed quantum system

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    Single-site measurement in a distributed macroscopic antiferromagnet is considered; we show that it can create antiferromagnetic sublattices at macroscopic scale. We demonstrate that the result of measurement depends on the symmetry of the ground state: for the easy-axis case the Neel state is formed, while for the easy-plane case unusual ``fan'' sublattices appear with unbroken rotational symmetry, and a decoherence wave is generated. For the latter case, a macroscopically large number of measurements is needed to pin down the orientation of the sublattices, in spite of the high degeneracy of the ground state. We note that the type of the final state and the appearance of the decoherence wave are governed by the degree of entanglement of spins in the system.Comment: 4 REVTeX pages, 1 figure in PostScrip
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