Magnetic skin effect in Pb(Fe _{1/2}$Nb _{1/2}$)O.

J Phys Condens Matter

School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JZ, United Kingdom.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Relaxor-ferroelectrics are materials with unique dielectric properties due to random dipolar fields created by strong chemical inhomogeneity, displaying a significant skin effect where surface structures differ from the bulk over a length of approximately 100 μm.
  • A study of Pb(Fe_{1/2}Nb_{1/2})O (PFN) showed it has ferroelectric and relaxor-like dielectric characteristics, along with antiferromagnetism, indicating it is a multiferroic material.
  • Using muon spectroscopy, the research revealed depth-dependent magnetic relaxation behaviors in PFN, demonstrating a magnetic skin effect similar to that seen in its structural properties, while the chemical concentration variations alone did not explain these dynamics.

Article Abstract

Relaxor-ferroelectrics display exceptional dielectric properties resulting from the underlying random dipolar fields induced by strong chemical inhomogeneity. An unusual structural aspect of relaxors is a skin-effect where the near-surface region in single crystals exhibit structures and critical phenomena that differ from the bulk. Relaxors are unique in that this skin effect extends over a macroscopic lengthscale of ∼100 μmwhereas usual surface layers only extend over a few unit cells (or ∼nm). We present a muon spectroscopy study of Pb(Fe_{1/2}Nb_{1/2})O(PFN) which displays ferroelectric order, including many relaxor-like dielectric properties such as a frequency broadened dielectric response, and antiferromagnetism with spatially short-range polar correlations and hence can be termed a multiferroic. In terms of the magnetic behavior determined by the Fe(S=5/2, ≈ 0) ions, PFN has been characterized as a unique example of a 'cluster spin-glass'. We use variable momentum muon spectroscopy to study the depth dependence of the slow magnetic relaxations in a large 1 cmcrystal of PFN. Zero-fieldmuon spin relaxation is parameterized using a stretched exponential, indicative of a distribution of relaxation rates of the Fespins. This bandwidth of frequencies changes as a function of muon momentum, indicative of a change in the Ferelaxation rates as a function of muon implantation depth in our single crystal. Usingmuon elemental analysis, we find small-to-no measurable change in the Fe/Nbconcentration with depth implying that chemical concentration alone cannot account for the change in the relaxational dynamics. PFN displays an analogous magnetic skin effect reported to exist in the structural properties of relaxor-ferroelectrics.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-648X/ad6523DOI Listing

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