4.8 Article

Atomically engineered ferroic layers yield a room - temperature magnetoelectric multiferroic

Journal

NATURE
Volume 537, Issue 7621, Pages 523-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature19343

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering [DE-SC0002334]
  2. National Science Foundation [ECCS-15420819, DGE-1144153]
  3. National Science Foundation (NSF) Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers programme [DMR 1120296]
  4. Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the US Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  5. Army Research Office
  6. National Science Foundation
  7. C-SPINS, one of six centres of STARnet, a Semiconductor Research Corporation programme - MARCO
  8. DARPA
  9. Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC) [2014-IN-2534]
  10. SRC-FAME, one of six centres of STARnet, a Semiconductor Research Corporation programme - MARCO
  11. National Research Council NIST
  12. NSF [EEC-1160504]
  13. Swiss National Science Foundation
  14. David and Lucile Packard Foundation

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Materials that exhibit simultaneous order in their electric and magnetic ground states hold promise for use in next-generation memory devices in which electric fields control magnetism(1,2). Such materials are exceedingly rare, however, owing to competing requirements for displacive ferroelectricity and magnetism(3). Despite the recent identification of several new multiferroic materials and magnetoelectric coupling mechanisms(4-15), known single-phase multiferroics remain limited by antiferromagnetic or weak ferromagnetic alignments, by a lack of coupling between the order parameters, or by having properties that emerge only well below room temperature, precluding device applications(2). Here we present a methodology for constructing single-phase multiferroic materials in which ferroelectricity and strong magnetic ordering are coupled near room temperature. Starting with hexagonal LuFeO3-the geometric ferroelectric with the greatest known planar rumpling(16)-we introduce individual monolayers of FeO during growth to construct formula-unit-thick syntactic layers of ferrimagnetic LuFe2O4 (refs 17, 18) within the LuFeO3 matrix, that is, (LuFeO3)(m)/(LuFe2O4)(1) superlattices. The severe rumpling imposed by the neighbouring LuFeO3 drives the ferrimagnetic LuFe2O4 into a simultaneously ferroelectric state, while also reducing the LuFe2O4 spin frustration. This increases the magnetic transition temperature substantially-from 240 kelvin for LuFe2O4 (ref. 18) to 281 kelvin for (LuFeO3)(9)/(LuFe2O4)(1). Moreover, the ferroelectric order couples to the ferrimagnetism, enabling direct electric-field control of magnetism at 200 kelvin. Our results demonstrate a design methodology for creating higher-temperature magnetoelectric multiferroics by exploiting a combination of geometric frustration, lattice distortions and epitaxial engineering.

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