Structural changes concurrent with ferromagnetic transition |
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Affiliation: | Yang Sen a) , Bao Hui-Xin a) , Zhou Chao a) , Wang Yu a) , Ren Xiao-Bing a) b) , Song Xiao-Ping a) , Yoshitaka Matsushita c) , Yoshio Katsuya c) , Masahiko Tanaka c) , and Keisuke Kobayashi c) a) Frontier Institute of Science and Technology, MOE Key Laboratory for Nonequilibrium Synthesis and Modulation of Condensed Matter, and State Key Laboratory for Mechanical Behavior of Materials, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China b) Ferroic Physics Group, National Institute for Materials Science, Tsukuba, 305-0047, Ibaraki, Japan c) National Institute for Materials Science, Beamline BL15XU, Spring-8, 1-1-1 Kohto, Sayo-cho, Hyogo 679-5148, Japan |
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Abstract: | Ferromagnetic transition has generally been considered to involve only an ordering of magnetic moment with no change in the host crystal structure or symmetry, as evidenced by a wealth of crystal structure data from conventional X-ray diffractometry (XRD). However, the existence of magnetostriction in all known ferromagnetic systems indicates that the magnetic moment is coupled to the crystal lattice; hence there is a possibility that magnetic ordering may cause a change in crystal structure. With the development of high-resolution synchrotron XRD, more and more magnetic transitions have been found to be accompanied by simultaneous structural changes. In this article, we review our recent progress in understand- ing the structural change at a ferromagnetic transition, including synchrotron XRD evidence of structural changes at the ferromagnetic transition, a phenomenological theory of crystal structure changes accompanying ferromagnetic transitions, new insight into magnetic morphotropic phase boundaries (MPB) and so on. Two intriguing implications of non-centric symmetry in the ferromagnetic phase and the first-order nature of ferromagnetic transition are also discussed here. In short, this review is intended to give a self-consistent and logical account of structural change occurring simultaneously with a ferromagnetic transition, which may provide new insight for developing highly magneto-responsive materials. |
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Keywords: | ferromagnetic transition crystal structure morphotropic phase boundary (MPB) magnetostriction multiferroicity |
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