B. Rajeswaran, D. I. Khomskii, A. K. Zvezdin, C. N. R. Rao, A. Sundaresan
We report ferroelectricity with fairly large spontaneous polarization (P ~ 0.2 - 0.8 \muC/cm2) below the N\'eel temperature of chromium (TNCr) in weakly ferromagnetic rare-earth orthochromites, RCrO3 (R=rare-earth) only when the rare-earth ion is magnetic. Intriguingly, the ferroelectricity in ErCrO3 (TC = 133 K) disappears at a spin-reorientation (Morin) transition (TSR ~ 22 K) below which the weak ferromagnetism associated with the Cr-sublattice also disappears, demonstrating the crucial role of weak ferromagnetism in inducing ferroelectricity. Further, the ferroelectric polarization (P) could be reversed by reversing the spontaneous magnetization (M) by changing the polarity of magnetic field, indicating a strong magnetoelectric effect. We suggest that the ferroelectricity occurs in RCrO3, due to the combined effect of poling field that breaks the symmetry and the exchange field on R-ion from Cr-sublattice stabilizes the polar state. We propose that a similar mechanism could work in the isostructural rare-earth orthoferrites, RFeO3 as well.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1201.0826
No comments:
Post a Comment