| Literature DB >> 28675301 |
Stjepan Bozidar Hrkac1, Christian Thorsten Koops1, Madjid Abes1, Christina Krywka2,3, Martin Müller2,3, Manfred Burghammer4, Michael Sztucki4, Thomas Dane4, Sören Kaps5, Yogendra Kumar Mishra5, Rainer Adelung5, Julius Schmalz6, Martina Gerken6, Enno Lage5, Christine Kirchhof5, Eckhard Quandt5, Olaf Magnus Magnussen1,3, Bridget Mary Murphy1,3.
Abstract
The intrinsic strain at coupled components in magnetoelectric composites plays an important role for the properties and function of these materials. In this in situ X-ray nanodiffraction experiment, the coating-induced as well as the magnetic-field-induced strain at the coupled interface of complex magnetoelectric microcomposites were investigated. These consist of piezoelectric ZnO microrods coated with an amorphous layer of magnetostrictive (Fe90Co10)78Si12B10. While the intrinsic strain is in the range of 10-4, the magnetic-field-induced strain is within 10-5, one order of magnitude smaller. Additionally, the strain relaxation distance of around 5 μm for both kinds of strain superposes indicating a correlation. The value of both intrinsic and magnetic-field-induced strain can be manipulated by the diameter of the rodlike composite. The intrinsic interface strain within the ZnO increases exponentially by decreasing the rod diameter while the magnetic-field-induced strain increases linearly within the given range. This study shows that miniaturizing has a huge impact on magnetoelectric composite properties, resulting in a strongly enhanced strain field and magnetic response.Entities:
Keywords: X-ray nanodiffraction; ZnO; magnetic field; magnetoelectric; microrod; strain
Year: 2017 PMID: 28675301 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.6b15598
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229