Physics:Piezomagnetism

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Short description: Ability to induce a magnetic moment by stressing a material

Piezomagnetism is a phenomenon observed in some antiferromagnetic and ferrimagnetic crystals. It is characterized by a linear coupling between the system's magnetic polarization and mechanical strain. In a piezomagnetic material, one may induce a spontaneous magnetic moment by applying mechanical stress, or a physical deformation by applying a magnetic field.

Piezomagnetism differs from the related property of magnetostriction; if an applied magnetic field is reversed in direction, the strain produced changes signs. Additionally, a non-zero piezomagnetic moment can be produced by mechanical strain alone, at zero fields, which is not true of magnetostriction.[1] According to the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE):

"Piezomagnetism is the linear magneto-mechanical effect analogous to the linear electromechanical effect of piezoelectricity. Similarly, magnetostriction and electrostriction are analogous second-order effects. These higher-order effects can be represented as effectively first-order when variations in the system parameters are small compared with the initial values of the parameters".

[2]

The piezomagnetic effect is made possible by an absence of certain symmetry elements in a crystal structure; specifically, symmetry under time reversal forbids the property.[3]

The first experimental observation of piezomagnetism was made in 1960, in the fluorides of cobalt and manganese.[4]

The strongest piezomagnet known is uranium dioxide, with magnetoelastic memory switching at magnetic fields near 180,000 Oe at temperatures below 30 kelvins.[5]

References

  1. Cullity, B. D. (1971). "Fundamentals of Magnetostriction". Journal of Metals 23 (1): 35–41. doi:10.1007/BF03355677. Bibcode1971JOM....23a..35C. 
  2. IEEE Standard on Magnetostrictive Materials: Piezomagnetic Nomenclature. doi:10.1109/IEEESTD.1991.101048. ISBN 0-7381-4558-0. 
  3. Dzialoshinskii, I. E. (1958). "The problem of piezomagnetism". Soviet Phys. JETP 6: 621. http://www.jetp.ac.ru/cgi-bin/dn/e_006_03_0621.pdf. 
  4. Borovik-Romanov, A.S. (1960). "Piezomagnetism in the antiferromagnetic fluorides of cobalt and manganese". Soviet Phys. JETP 11: 786. http://www.jetp.ac.ru/files/borovik1960_en.pdf. 
  5. Jaime, M.; Saul, A.; Salamon, M.; Zapf, V. S.; Harrison, N.; Durakiewicz, T.; Lashley, J. C.; Andersson, D. A. et al. (2017). "Piezomagnetism and magnetoelastic memory in uranium dioxide". Nature Communications 8 (1): 99. doi:10.1038/s41467-017-00096-4. PMID 28740123. Bibcode2017NatCo...8...99J.