Jump to content

Orthoferrite

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Citation bot (talk | contribs) at 19:01, 2 February 2023 (Add: s2cid. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Corvus florensis | #UCB_webform 3218/3499). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

An orthoferrite is any of a class of chemical compounds with the formula RFeO3, where R is one or more rare-earth elements. Orthoferrites have an orthorhombic crystal structure with a space group Pbnm and most are weakly ferromagnetic.[1] At the Néel temperature the subsystem of iron ions orders into a slightly canted antiferromagnetic structure with antiferromagnetic moment G and a weak ferromagnetic moment F. The rare-earth ion subsystem acquires magnetization m due to an interaction with the iron subsystem.

The orthoferrites are particularly interesting because of the presence of an antisymmetric exchange interaction which involves the vector cross product of neighboring spins as opposed to the usual scalar product. In the absence of this interaction, the orthoferrites would be antiferromagnetic. Its presence leads to a small canting of the sublattices, making the orthoferrites “weak” ferromagnets with . Another interesting feature of these materials is the fact that some of them exhibit a transition as a function of temperature, in which the direction of the antiferromagnetically ordered spins and consequently also of the net magnetization rotates by 90°.[2]

Applications

The combination of high magnetic resonance frequencies with very large magnetooptical effects makes the orthoferrites interesting objects for study of laser-induced dynamics. Orthoferrites are transparent, and can modify the polarisation of a beam of light under the control of a magnetic field (Faraday rotation). This makes them potentially useful as optical sensors and actuators for use in optical communications. [3] They were also once used as the magnetic material in bubble memory.

Examples

References

  1. ^ "orthoferrite", Oxford English Dictionary, Draft Revision March 2008
  2. ^ D. Afanasiev; et al. (8 February 2021). "Ultrafast control of magnetic interactions via light-driven phonons". Nature Materials. 20 (5): 607–611. arXiv:1912.01938. Bibcode:2021NatMa..20..607A. doi:10.1038/s41563-021-00922-7. ISSN 1476-1122. PMC 7610706. PMID 33558717.
  3. ^ Didosyan, Hauser, Reider, Nicolics, Sensors and Actuators on Orthoferrites, IEEE 2004
  4. ^ Ita, B.; Murugavel, P.; Ponnambalam, V.; Raju, A. R. (2003). "Magnetic properties of lanthanum orthoferrite fine powders prepared by different chemical routes" (PDF). Journal of Chemical Sciences. 115 (5–6): 519–524. doi:10.1007/BF02708243. S2CID 94892093.
  5. ^ Maziewski, A.; Szymczak, R. (1977). "Visual observation of phase domains in dysprosium orthoferrite". Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics. 10 (4): L37–L38. Bibcode:1977JPhD...10L..37M. doi:10.1088/0022-3727/10/4/003. S2CID 250803792.