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Relation between microscopic interactions and macroscopic properties in ferroics

Authors :
Naëmi Leo
Laura J. Heyderman
Claire Donnelly
Manfred Fiebig
Jannis Lehmann
Amadé Bortis
Peter M. Derlet
Source :
Nature Nanotechnology, Nature Nanotechnology, 15 (11)

Abstract

The driving force in materials to spontaneously form states with magnetic or electric order is of fundamental importance for basic research and device technology. The macroscopic properties and functionalities of these ferroics depend on the size, distribution and morphology of domains; that is, of regions across which such uniform order is maintained1. Typically, extrinsic factors such as strain profiles, grain size or annealing procedures control the size and shape of the domains2,3,4,5, whereas intrinsic parameters are often difficult to extract due to the complexity of a processed material. Here, we achieve this separation by building artificial crystals of planar nanomagnets that are coupled by well-defined, tuneable and competing magnetic interactions6,7,8,9. Aside from analysing the domain configurations, we uncover fundamental intrinsic correlations between the microscopic interactions establishing magnetically compensated order and the macroscopic manifestations of these interactions in basic physical properties. Experiment and simulations reveal how competing interactions can be exploited to control ferroic hallmark properties such as the size and morphology of domains, topological properties of domain walls or their thermal mobility.<br />Nature Nanotechnology, 15 (11)<br />ISSN:1748-3387<br />ISSN:1748-3395

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17483395 and 17483387
Volume :
15
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Nanotechnology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....18b4cb974d478c708f4eb53d60172dc7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-020-0763-9