Magnetic phase control by an electric field
Thomas Lottermoser,
Thomas Lonkai,
Uwe Amann,
Dietmar Hohlwein,
Jörg Ihringer and
Manfred Fiebig ()
Additional contact information
Thomas Lottermoser: Max-Born-Institut
Thomas Lonkai: Universität Tübingen
Uwe Amann: Universität Tübingen
Dietmar Hohlwein: Universität Tübingen
Jörg Ihringer: Universität Tübingen
Manfred Fiebig: Max-Born-Institut
Nature, 2004, vol. 430, issue 6999, 541-544
Abstract:
Abstract The quest for higher data density in information storage is motivating investigations into approaches for manipulating magnetization by means other than magnetic fields. This is evidenced by the recent boom in magnetoelectronics and ‘spintronics’1, where phenomena such as carrier effects in magnetic semiconductors2 and high-correlation effects in colossal magnetoresistive compounds3 are studied for their device potential. The linear magnetoelectric effect—the induction of polarization by a magnetic field and of magnetization by an electric field—provides another route for linking magnetic and electric properties. It was recently discovered that composite materials and magnetic ferroelectrics exhibit magnetoelectric effects that exceed previously known effects4,5 by orders of magnitude6,7,8,9,10, with the potential to trigger magnetic or electric phase transitions. Here we report a system whose magnetic phase can be controlled by an external electric field: ferromagnetic ordering in hexagonal HoMnO3 is reversibly switched on and off by the applied field via magnetoelectric interactions. We monitor this process using magneto-optical techniques and reveal its microscopic origin by neutron and X-ray diffraction. From our results, we identify basic requirements for other candidate materials to exhibit magnetoelectric phase control.
Date: 2004
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:nat:nature:v:430:y:2004:i:6999:d:10.1038_nature02728
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DOI: 10.1038/nature02728
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