Fr. 134.00

Magnetoelectric Response in Low-Dimensional Frustrated Spin Systems

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Electric control of magnetic properties, or inversely, magnetic control of dielectric properties in solids, is called a magnetoelectric effect and has long been investigated from the point of view of both fundamental physics and potential application. Magnetic and dielectric properties usually show minimal coupling, but it recently has been discovered that magnetically induced ferroelectricity in some spiral magnets enables remarkably large and versatile magnetoelectric responses. To stabilize such helimagnetism, magnetic frustration (competition between different magnetic interactions) is considered the key. In the present work, two of the most typical frustrated spin systems-triangular lattice antiferromagnets and edge-shared chain magnets-have systematically been investigated. Despite the crystallographic simplicity of target systems, rich magnetoelectric responses are ubiquitously observed. The current results published here offer a useful guideline in the search for new materials with unique magnetoelectric functions, and also provide an important basis for a deeper understanding of magnetoelectric phenomena in more complex systems.

List of contents

1 Introduction.- 2 Experimental Methods.- 3 Magnetoelectric response in triangular lattice antiferromagnets.- 4 Magnetoelectric response in S=1/2 chain helimagnets.- 5 Summary.

About the author










Dr. Shinichiro Seki

Department of Applied Physics, University of Tokyo

Summary

Electric control of magnetic properties, or inversely, magnetic control of dielectric properties in solids, is called a magnetoelectric effect and has long been investigated from the point of view of both fundamental physics and potential application. Magnetic and dielectric properties usually show minimal coupling, but it recently has been discovered that magnetically induced ferroelectricity in some spiral magnets enables remarkably large and versatile magnetoelectric responses. To stabilize such helimagnetism, magnetic frustration (competition between different magnetic interactions) is considered the key. In the present work, two of the most typical frustrated spin systems—triangular lattice antiferromagnets and edge-shared chain magnets—have systematically been investigated. Despite the crystallographic simplicity of target systems, rich magnetoelectric responses are ubiquitously observed. The current results published here offer a useful guideline in the search for new materials with unique magnetoelectric functions, and also provide an important basis for a deeper understanding of magnetoelectric phenomena in more complex systems.

Product details

Authors Shinichiro Seki
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.01.2014
 
EAN 9784431546825
ISBN 978-4-431-54682-5
No. of pages 112
Dimensions 155 mm x 7 mm x 235 mm
Weight 201 g
Illustrations XII, 112 p.
Series Springer Theses
Springer Theses
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Physics, astronomy > Atomic physics, nuclear physics

B, Metals technology / metallurgy, Optical and Electronic Materials, Physics and Astronomy, Metals, Metallic Materials, Metals and Alloys, Electronic materials, Electronic devices & materials, Optical Materials, Magnetism, Magnetic materials, Magnetism, Magnetic Materials

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