| Literature DB >> 32316609 |
Songwei Wang1,2, Yang Bai1, Xin Zhang1,2, Liguo Fan1, Huaiying Zhou1,2.
Abstract
We reported the magnetic, dielectric and magnetoelectric properties of NdCrO3 polycrystalline ceramics. Magnetization curves revealed two magnetic transitions at 227 K and 38 K, which corresponded to Cr3+ canted antiferromagnetic ordering and Cr3+ spin reorientation phase transition, respectively. At 11.5 K, a Schottky-type anomaly was observed, caused by Nd3+ ground doublet Zeeman splitting. High-temperature dielectric relaxation exhibited a type of thermally activated relaxation process, which mainly resulted from the Maxwell-Wagner effect. The spin-reorientation of Cr3+ ions and the Nd3+ ground doublet splitting were observed to be accompanied by an electric polarization. The polarization could be induced by the presence of the antiferromagnetic-type domain walls, which led to spatial inversion symmetry breaking.Entities:
Keywords: NdCrO3 ceramics; magnetic property; magnetoelectric properties
Year: 2020 PMID: 32316609 PMCID: PMC7215864 DOI: 10.3390/ma13081904
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1(Color online) (a) Rietveld refinement result of the XRD pattern, (b) FESEM morphology of the NdCrO3 sample.
Figure 2(Color online) Temperature-dependent magnetization curve of NdCrO3 at the magnetic field of 100 Oe. The inset shows the reciprocal of the dc magnetic susceptibility vs. the temperature.
Figure 3(Color online) (a) The real part (ε′) of the dielectric constant vs. temperature at various frequencies. (b) Corresponding dielectric loss (tan δ). The inset is log (ε″) vs. log (f) at 110 K in the low frequency region and the solid line is the one with slope −1. (c) The lnƒ vs. 1000/T derived from tan δ. (d) Nyquist plots at 300 K for the circuit shown.
Figure 4(Color online) (a) ε′ vs. temperature at different fields. (b) ZFC magnetization curve under at 100 Oe.