Strong spin-lattice coupling in condensed matter gives rise to intriguing physical phenomena such as colossal magnetoresistance and giant magnetoelectric effects. The phenomenological hallmark of such a strong spin-lattice coupling is the manifestation of a large anomaly in the crystal structure at the magnetic transition temperature. Here we report that the magnetic N é el temperature of the multiferroic compound BiFeO 3 is suppressed to around room temperature by heteroepitaxial misfi t strain. Remarkably, the ferroelectric state undergoes a fi rst-order transition to another ferroelectric state simultaneously with the magnetic transition temperature. Our fi ndings provide a unique example of a concurrent magnetic and ferroelectric transition at the same temperature among proper ferroelectrics, taking a step toward room temperature magnetoelectric applications.
We investigate the ferroelectric state of a tetragonal BiFeO3 thin film grown on a LaAlO3 (001) substrate using an optical second harmonic generation (SHG) microscope. Whereas the ferroelectric state of this material hosts nanometer-sized domains which again form micrometer-sized domains of four different configurations, we could figure out the characteristic features of each domain from the SHG mapping with various sizes of the probe beam, i.e., from 0.7 to 3.9 μm in its diameter. In particular, we demonstrate that a single micrometer-sized domain contributes to the SHG as a coherent summation of the constituent nanometer-sized domains, and multi-micrometer-sized domains contribute to the SHG as an incoherent summation of each micro-domain.
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