“…These techniques, and variants of them proposed by Bissell [5], are suitable for both nano-structured and bulk magnetic materials, being highly versatile for experimental studies. Henkel plots [2] have been applied for the description of magnetic interactions in magnetic data storage [6], studies of magnetic rocks [7], studies of superconductors, hard and soft magnets [8], studies of exchange bias systems [9], other studies providing insights on interactions that govern magnetization processes [10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20], or indicate negative interaction processes in systems where no dipolar interactions are present [21,22]. Given the similarities between the ferromagnetic and ferroelectric materials in that both systems display hysteresis, coercive fields, Curie temperature, and remanent states used in both cases for digital data storage, in this paper it is hypothesized that the equivalent magnetic remanent DCD and IRM curves could be measured for a ferroelectric system and renamed DC Depolarization (DCDP) and Isothermal Remanent Polarization (IRP), respectively.…”