Metamagnetism stabilized giant magnetoelectric coupling in ferroelectric xBaTiO3–(1 − x)BiCoO3 solid solution

Literature Information

Publication Date 2018-02-14
DOI 10.1039/C7CP07677K
Impact Factor 3.676
Authors

Jun Chen, Masaki Azuma


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Abstract

In order to establish the correlation between the magnetoelectric coupling and magnetic instability, we have studied the structural, magnetic, and ferroelectric properties of BaTiO3 modified BiCoO3i.e. xBaTiO3–(1 − x)BiCoO3 as a function of BaTiO3 concentration (x) and volume from a series of general-gradient-corrected (GGA), GGA plus onsite Coulomb repulsion (U), full potential, spin-density-functional band-structure calculations within the framework of density functional theory along with synchrotron X-ray diffraction and magnetic measurement studies. G-type antiferromagnetic ordering was found to be energetically favorable among all the considered magnetic configurations for x < 0.45 and higher concentrations stabilize with nonmagnetic (NM) states. We observe metamagnetic spin state transitions associated with paraelectric to ferroelectric transitions as a function of volume and x using synchrotron diffraction and computational studies, indicating a strong magnetoelectric coupling. Specifically for x = 0.33 composition, a pressure induced high spin (HS) to low spin (LS) transition occurs when the volume is compressed below 2.5%. Our orbital-projected density of states show a HS state for Co3+ in the ferroelectric ground state for x < 0.45 and the corresponding paraelectric phase is stable in the NM state due to the stabilization of LS state as evident from our fixed-spin-moment calculations and magnetic measurements. The nature of chemical bonding has been studied using partial density of states, electron localization function, and Born effective charge analysis. High values of spontaneous ferroelectric polarizations are predicted for lower x values which inversely vary with x because of the reduction of tetragonality (c/a) with increase in x which indicates the presence of both spin–lattice and ferroelectricity–lattice coupling. Our partial polarization analysis shows that not only the lone pair at Bi sites but also the d0-ness of Ti4+ ions contribute to the net polarization. Moreover, we find that the HS–LS transition point and magnetoelectric coupling strength can be varied by x.

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Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
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