| Literature DB >> 26936414 |
Ling Chen1,2,3, Alexei A Bokov2, Weimin Zhu2, Hua Wu2,4, Jian Zhuang1,2, Nan Zhang1,2, Hamel N Tailor2, Wei Ren1, Zuo-Guang Ye1,2.
Abstract
Significant quenched disorder in crystal structure can break ferroic (magnetic or electric) long-range order, resulting in the development of ferroic glassy states at low temperatures such as magnetic spin glasses, electric dipolar glasses, relaxor ferroelectrics, etc. These states have been widely studied due to novel physical phenomena they reveal. Much less known are the effects of quenched disorder in multiferroics, i.e. the materials where magnetic and electric correlations coexist. Here we report an unusual behaviour in complex perovskite Pb(Fe2/3W1/3)O3 (PFW) crystals: the coexistence of electric relaxor, magnetic relaxor and antiferromagnetic (AFM) states. The most striking finding is the transformation of the AFM phase into a new reentrant-type magnetic glassy phase below Tg ≅ 10 K. We show that the behaviour at this transformation contrasts the typical behaviour of canonical spin glasses and is similar to the behaviour of relaxor ferroelectrics. Magnetoelectric effect is also observed in the AFM phase in the temperature range of the transition into electric relaxor phase at Tf ≅ 200. The mechanism of magnetic relaxor behaviour is supposed to arise from the frustrated interactions among the spins located at the AFM domain walls. Our results should inspire further studies of multirelaxor behaviour in other multiferroic systems.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26936414 PMCID: PMC4776243 DOI: 10.1038/srep22327
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Magnetic properties of PFW crystal measured in a large dc field: (a) FC and ZFC magnetic susceptibilities vs T. (b) Magnification of the low-temperature part of (a). Solid lines are the fittings to quadratic equation (2). (c) Reciprocal FC susceptibility vs T. Solid lines are the fittings to the CW law (3) in the temperature intervals of 80 K ≤ T ≤ 190 K and 220 K ≤ T ≤ 300 K, respectively. Insets in (b,c) show the residual error analysis.
Figure 2Comparison of electric and magnetic low-field properties of the PFW crystal. Temperature dependences of (a) magnetic and (b) electric ac susceptibility. Solid lines are fittings to equation (2) for χ(T) at different frequencies and for χ(T) at 1 Hz. Insets show the fitting to the Vogel-Fulcher law (1). Inset in (b) is the enlarged low-temperature part of the data plotted on logarithmic scale.
The best-fit parameters of equations (1) and (2) for electric, χ , and magnetic, χ , susceptibilities.
| Low-field ac | FC dc | ZFC dc | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 164 | 5.4 | |||
| 560 | 80.2 | |||
| 2 × 1012 | 3.2 × 109 | |||
| 186 | 3.2 ± 0.7 | −4.4 ± 0.4 | −4.0 ± 0.5 | |
| 59 | 45.5 ± 1.1 | 53.4 ± 1.2 | 55.0 ± 0.7 | |
Figure 3Magnetic behavior of PFW crystal at different temperatures: (a) Magnetic hysteresis loops after ZFC. Inset is a magnified low-field part of the curves; (b,c) Values of ΔM(H) loops calculated from hysteresis loops shown in (a); (d–f) Schematics of loops displayed in different temperature intervals. Line curvature and hysteresis are exaggerated to highlight the features.
Figure 4Schematic representation of two AFM domains in PFW.
Domain boundary is shown by dashed line. Due to the existence of competing bonds (shown blue) some spins (blue) appear to be frustrated.