Multiferroics, showing simultaneous ordering of electrical and magnetic
degrees of freedom, are remarkable materials as seen from both the academic and
technological points of view. A prominent mechanism of multiferroicity is the
spin-driven ferroelectricity, often found in frustrated antiferromagnets with
helical spin order. There, similar to conventional ferroelectrics, the
electrical dipoles arise from an off-centre displacement of ions. However,
recently a different mechanism, namely purely electronic ferroelectricity,
where charge order breaks inversion symmetry, has attracted considerable
interest. Here we provide evidence for this exotic type of ferroelectricity,
accompanied by antiferromagnetic spin order, in a two-dimensional organic
charge-transfer salt, thus representing a new class of multiferroics. Quite
unexpectedly for electronic ferroelectrics, dipolar and spin order arise nearly
simultaneously. This can be ascribed to the loss of spin frustration induced by
the ferroelectric ordering. Hence, here the spin order is driven by the
ferroelectricity, in marked contrast to the spin-driven ferroelectricity in
helical magnets.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures (including 4 pages and 6 figures in supplementary
information). Version 2 with minor errors corrected (legend of Fig. 3c and
definition of vectors e and Q