2019
DOI: 10.1038/s41563-019-0374-8
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Shear-strain-mediated magnetoelectric effects revealed by imaging

Abstract: Large changes in the magnetization of ferromagnetic films can be electrically driven by non-180 ferroelectric domain switching in underlying substrates, but the shear components of the strains that mediate these magnetoelectric effects have not been considered so far. Here we reveal the presence of these shear strains in a polycrystalline film of Ni on a 0.68Pb(Mg 1/3 Nb 2/3)O 3-0.32PbTiO 3 substrate in the pseudo-cubic (011) pc orientation. Although vibrating sample magnetometry records giant magnetoelectric… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…These data show that by simply reversing the PMN-PT polarization, the average magnetization direction of the Fe layer is drastically changed in absence of any magnetic fields [32]. It is clear that in the P up case M strongly prefers a different orientation compared to the P down case.…”
Section: B Imaging Of Ferromagnetic Domains By Peem 175mentioning
confidence: 76%
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“…These data show that by simply reversing the PMN-PT polarization, the average magnetization direction of the Fe layer is drastically changed in absence of any magnetic fields [32]. It is clear that in the P up case M strongly prefers a different orientation compared to the P down case.…”
Section: B Imaging Of Ferromagnetic Domains By Peem 175mentioning
confidence: 76%
“…After probing magnetoelectric coupling at the macroscopic 176 and mesoscopic scale, we employed XMCD-PEEM to reach 177 submicrometer resolution [11,32,39,40] and to study the evo-178 lution of magnetic domains as a function of out-of-plane 179 ferroelectric polarization of the substrate. With a field of view of 50 μm, the imaged area is comparable with the one probed by XMCD measurements.…”
Section: B Imaging Of Ferromagnetic Domains By Peem 175mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…5f). Although the clockwise and anticlockwise nature of these rotations could be explained in terms of the ambipolar shear strains associated with rhombohedral ferroelectric domain switching 54 , the very different rotation magnitudes imply the presence of an additional factor. By assuming this additional factor to be a spatially varying uniaxial magnetic anisotropy, due to spatially varying stress associated with the formation of the observed cracks (Supplementary Note 5), a magnetic free energy model was able to approximately reproduce both the local and macroscopic magnetoelectric effects (Supplementary Note 12).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…28,29 Large voltage-driven switches of net magnetization have only been achieved in the latter systems, [15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29] for example, via strain from ferroelectric substrates of BaTiO 3 (BTO) 30,31 and [24][25][26] However, the vast majority of strain-mediated CMEs are volatile because the ferroelectric substrates show voltage-strain "butterfly" characteristics that are single-valued at zero electric field. 15,[30][31][32][33][34][35] Nonvolatile CMEs include 90 rotations [24][25][26] and reversals 28,29 but suffer the need for magnetic-field assistance, 26,28 the need for setting an inplane polarization before deposition, 24,25 or inhomogeneity. 29 Here, we use voltage-driven anisotropic strain from ferroelectric substrates of PMN-PT (011) to control the magnetization in ferromagnetic films of Co 40 Fe 40 B 20 (CFB).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%