4.7 Article

High Magnetic Hardness for the Canted Antiferromagnetic, Ferroelectric, and Ferroelastic Layered Perovskite-like (C2H5NH3)2[FeIICl4]

Journal

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 54, Issue 6, Pages 2866-2874

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ic5030229

Keywords

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Funding

  1. (JSPS) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), a Nanotechnology Support Project of MEXT [206688]
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), a Nanotechnology Support Project of MEXT [18205023, 25220803, 19655050]
  3. Natural Science Center for Basic Research and Development (N-BARD), Hiroshima University
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15K13674, 19655050] Funding Source: KAKEN

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An unusual high magnetic hardness for the layered perovskite-like (C2H5NH3)(2)[(FeCl4)-Cl-II],, in addition to its already found canted antiferromagnetism, ferroelasticity, and ferroelectricity, which are absent for (CH3NH3)(2)[(FeCl4)-Cl-II], has been observed. The additional CH2 in the ethylammonium compared to methylammonium allows more degrees of freedom and therefore numerous phase transitions which have been characterized by single-crystal structure determinations from 383 to 10 K giving the sequence from tetragonal to orthorhombic to monoclinic (I4/mmm <-> P4(2)/ncm <-> Pccn <-> Pcab <-> C2/c) accompanied by both tilting and rotation of the FeCl6 octahedra. The magnetic properties on single crystal and powder samples at high temperature are similar for both compounds, but at T-N (C2H5NH3)(2)[(FeCl4)-Cl-II] is a proper canted antiferromagnet unlike the hidden canting observed for (CH3NH3)(2)[(FeCl4)-Cl-II]. The canting angle is 0.6 degrees toward the c-axis, and thus the moments lie in the easy plane of the iron-chloride layer defined by a critical exponent beta = 0.18. The isothermal magnetizations for the field along the three orthogonal crystallographic axes show wider hysteresis for H parallel to c and is present at all temperature below 98 K. The coercive field increases as the temperature is lowered, and at T < 20 K it is difficult to reverse all the moments with the available 50 kOe of the SQUID for both single crystal and powder samples. The shape of the virgin magnetization after zero-field-cool (ZFC) indicates that the high coercive, field is due to domain wall pinning. Thus, there are unusual associated anomalies such as asymmetric hysteresis and history dependence. The difference in magnetic hardness of the two compounds suggests that magnetic, electric, and elastic domains are intricately manifested and therefore raise the key question of how the different domains interact.

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