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Tuning magnetic spirals beyond room temperature with chemical disorder.

Mickaël MorinEmmanuel CanévetAdrien RaynaudMarek BartkowiakDenis SheptyakovVoraksmy BanMichel KenzelmannEkaterina PomjakushinaKazimierz ConderMarisa Medarde
Published in: Nature communications (2016)
In the past years, magnetism-driven ferroelectricity and gigantic magnetoelectric effects have been reported for a number of frustrated magnets featuring ordered spiral magnetic phases. Such materials are of high-current interest due to their potential for spintronics and low-power magnetoelectric devices. However, their low-magnetic ordering temperatures (typically <100 K) greatly restrict their fields of application. Here we demonstrate that the onset temperature of the spiral phase in the perovskite YBaCuFeO5 can be increased by more than 150 K through a controlled manipulation of the Fe/Cu chemical disorder. Moreover, we show that this novel mechanism can stabilize the magnetic spiral state of YBaCuFeO5 above the symbolic value of 25 °C at zero magnetic field. Our findings demonstrate that the properties of magnetic spirals, including its wavelength and stability range, can be engineered through the control of chemical disorder, offering a great potential for the design of materials with magnetoelectric properties beyond room temperature.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • molecularly imprinted
  • ionic liquid