Functional properties of the multiferroic spinel FeV<sub>2</sub>O<sub>4</sub>
ORAL
Abstract
The ferrimagnetic spinel class of materials is known for anomalous magnetoresponsive behaviors stemming from strong spin-lattice coupling and orbital ordering effects. In particular, the material FeV2O4, which has two-orbital active ions, is one of a few spinels to display type-II multiferroicity. The connection between symmetry lowering orbital-ordering transitions on the Fe/V-sites and the development of a ferroelectric polarization has yet to be understood. Furthermore, single-crystal samples demonstrate giant magnetostrictive and magnetodielectric couplings related to the behavior of magnetoelastic/multiferroic domains on the nanoscale in the bulk of the material. Here we present our ongoing work which characterizes this material on a variety of length-scales using macroscopic and scattering probes. Our results are comprised of neutron diffraction and diffuse scattering, small-angle neutron scattering, and macroscopic response measurements. By correlating these complementary datasets, we can comprehensively understand the functional properties of the material, ranging from the unit cell-level behavior to the field-response of complex domain-wall patterns observed on the mesoscale.
**Research was supported by National Science Foundation under NSF DMR 1455264*This research used resources at the High Flux Isotope Reactor and the Spallation Neutron Source, DOE Office of Science User Facilities operated by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.*This work was supported by the U.S. DOE, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division.
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Publication: Lazar L. Kish, Kannan Lu, Chris Pasco, Adam A. Aczel, Andrew Christianson, Andrew F. May, Haidong Zhou, Zheng Gai, Yaohua Liu, Feng Ye, Lisa DeBeer-Schmitt, Gregory J. MacDougall (2021), "Nanoscale complexity in the
multiferroic spinel FeV2O4." Manuscript in preparation.
Presenters
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Lazar L Kish
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champai