Electric field control of magnetism using multiferroic bismuth ferrite

Publication Type
Journal Article
Author
DOI
10.2497/jjspm.61.S19
Abstract
This article presents a review of some salient aspects of a broad class of functional materials, namely complex oxides. These materials, exemplified by the rare earth manganites, superconducting cuprates and more recently multiferroics such as bismuth ferrite, are characterized by a complex crystal chemistry, that is central to competing/cooperating spin, charge, orbital and lattice degrees of freedom. In addition to this, a fundamental defining feature of such materials is the complex nanoscale phase coexistence that appears to be central to the appearance of large responses. The emergence of pulsed laser deposition as a tool to create artificially engineered heterostructures has provided researchers with a powerful approach to create new states of matter at such heterointerfaces. This combined with modern xray, electron, neutron and proximal probes (such as conducting AFM, piezoresponse SPM, etc) and ab initio theoretical studies has provided us with deep insight into the various physical phenomena that manifest themselves in such materials.
Notes
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Journal
Funtai Oyobi Fummatsu Yakin/Journal of the Japan Society of Powder and Powder Metallurgy
Volume
61
Year of Publication
2014
Number
SUPLL.1
Pagination
S19-S24
Publisher
Journal of the Japan Society of Powder and Powder Metallurgy
ISSN Number
05328799
Keywords
Research Areas
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