MRS Meetings and Events

 

EL07.02.03 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Real-Time Imaging of Nonequilibrium Domain Evolution into a Multiferroic Phase

When and Where

Apr 23, 2024
2:30pm - 2:45pm

Room 342, Level 3, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Jan Gerrit Horstmann1,Yannik Zemp1,Ehsan Hassanpour Yesaghi1,Thomas Lottermoser1,Mads Weber2,Manfred Fiebig1

ETH Zurich1,Le Mans Université2

Abstract

Jan Gerrit Horstmann1,Yannik Zemp1,Ehsan Hassanpour Yesaghi1,Thomas Lottermoser1,Mads Weber2,Manfred Fiebig1

ETH Zurich1,Le Mans Université2
The properties and functionalities of multiferroic materials are governed by the microscopic domain structures of coexisting ferroic orders and their mutual coupling. Active control over multiferroic domains via external stimuli is desirable, with prominent examples in magnetoelectric inversion or transfer of domain patterns. These approaches typically harness electric or magnetic fields to affect the thermodynamically stable domain configuration within a multiferroic phase. Optical or thermal quenches through phase transitions can be used to transfer structural features between distinct phases, creating novel and potentially functional domain structures unattainable in thermal equilibrium. The impact of such transitions on multiferroic domain patterns and their dynamic evolution, however, remains a largely open subject.<br/><br/>In this work, we combine real-time Faraday imaging at kHz frame rates with fast optical excitations to investigate the evolution of domains across spin-reorientation transitions and into the multiferroic phase of Dy<sub>0.7</sub>Tb<sub>0.3</sub>FeO<sub>3</sub>. We find that optically-induced thermal quenches of the system can be harnessed to imprint the characteristic bubble domain pattern of the weak ferromagnetic order at elevated temperatures onto the low-temperature multiferroic phase. We identify the quenching rate across the different spin reorientation transitions as the decisive parameter governing the domain memory and the formation of metastable domain states forbidden under equilibrium conditions. Our results highlight the potential of optical stimuli for the switching and control of multiferroic domain structures, enabling the creation of new functional states via nonequilibrium pathways.

Keywords

magnetic properties | magnetooptic

Symposium Organizers

John Heron, University of Michigan
Morgan Trassin, ETH Zurich
Ruijuan Xu, North Carolina State University
Di Yi, Tsinghua University

Symposium Support

Gold
ADNANOTEK CORP.

Bronze
Arrayed Materials (China) Co., Ltd.
NBM Design, Inc.

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature