@article{33503, keywords = {Electricity, Temperature, Room temperature, Chemistry, Electron microscopy, Magnetism, Materials testing, Electric field, Article, Circular dichroism, Bismuth, Ferrite, Ferric oxide, Electromagnetic field, Nanomaterial, Ferric ion, Ferric Compounds, Magnetics, Magnetite nanoparticle, X-Ray, Electron Probe Microanalysis, Electromagnetic Phenomena, Magnetite Nanoparticles}, author = {Q He and Y.-H Chu and J.T Heron and S.Y Yang and W.I Liang and C.Y Kuo and H.J Lin and P Yu and C.W Liang and R.J Zeches and W.C Kuo and J.Y Juang and C.T Chen and E Arenholz and A Scholl and Ramamoorthy Ramesh}, title = {Electrically controllable spontaneous magnetism in nanoscale mixed phase multiferroics}, abstract = {Magnetoelectrics and multiferroics present exciting opportunities for electric-field control of magnetism. However, there are few room-temperature ferromagnetic-ferroelectrics. Among the various types of multiferroics the bismuth ferrite system has received much attention primarily because both the ferroelectric and the antiferromagnetic orders are quite robust at room temperature. Here we demonstrate the emergence of an enhanced spontaneous magnetization in a strain-driven rhombohedral and super-tetragonal mixed phase of BiFeO 3. Using X-ray magnetic circular dichroism-based photoemission electron microscopy coupled with macroscopic magnetic measurements, we find that the spontaneous magnetization of the rhombohedral phase is significantly enhanced above the canted antiferromagnetic moment in the bulk phase, as a consequence of a piezomagnetic coupling to the adjacent tetragonal-like phase and the epitaxial constraint. Reversible electric-field control and manipulation of this magnetic moment at room temperature is also shown. © 2011 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.}, year = {2011}, journal = {Nature Communications}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, issn = {20411723}, doi = {10.1038/ncomms1221}, note = {cited By 122}, language = {eng}, }