Browsing by Author "Zhou, Shiyu"
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Item Non-volatile magnon transport in a single domain multiferroic(Springer Nature, 2024) Husain, Sajid; Harris, Isaac; Meisenheimer, Peter; Mantri, Sukriti; Li, Xinyan; Ramesh, Maya; Behera, Piush; Taghinejad, Hossein; Kim, Jaegyu; Kavle, Pravin; Zhou, Shiyu; Kim, Tae Yeon; Zhang, Hongrui; Stevenson, Paul; Analytis, James G.; Schlom, Darrell; Salahuddin, Sayeef; Íñiguez-González, Jorge; Xu, Bin; Martin, Lane W.; Caretta, Lucas; Han, Yimo; Bellaiche, Laurent; Yao, Zhi; Ramesh, Ramamoorthy; Rice Advanced Materials InstituteAntiferromagnets have attracted significant attention in the field of magnonics, as promising candidates for ultralow-energy carriers for information transfer for future computing. The role of crystalline orientation distribution on magnon transport has received very little attention. In multiferroics such as BiFeO3 the coupling between antiferromagnetic and polar order imposes yet another boundary condition on spin transport. Thus, understanding the fundamentals of spin transport in such systems requires a single domain, a single crystal. We show that through Lanthanum (La) substitution, a single ferroelectric domain can be engineered with a stable, single-variant spin cycloid, controllable by an electric field. The spin transport in such a single domain displays a strong anisotropy, arising from the underlying spin cycloid lattice. Our work shows a pathway to understanding the fundamental origins of magnon transport in such a single domain multiferroic.Item Switching the spin cycloid in BiFeO3 with an electric field(Springer Nature, 2024) Meisenheimer, Peter; Moore, Guy; Zhou, Shiyu; Zhang, Hongrui; Huang, Xiaoxi; Husain, Sajid; Chen, Xianzhe; Martin, Lane W.; Persson, Kristin A.; Griffin, Sinéad; Caretta, Lucas; Stevenson, Paul; Ramesh, Ramamoorthy; Rice Advanced Materials InstituteBismuth ferrite (BiFeO3) is a multiferroic material that exhibits both ferroelectricity and canted antiferromagnetism at room temperature, making it a unique candidate in the development of electric-field controllable magnetic devices. The magnetic moments in BiFeO3 are arranged into a spin cycloid, resulting in unique magnetic properties which are tied to the ferroelectric order. Previous understanding of this coupling has relied on average, mesoscale measurements. Using nitrogen vacancy-based diamond magnetometry, we observe the magnetic spin cycloid structure of BiFeO3 in real space. This structure is magnetoelectrically coupled through symmetry to the ferroelectric polarization and this relationship is maintained through electric field switching. Through a combination of in-plane and out-of-plane electrical switching, coupled with ab initio studies, we have discovered that the epitaxy from the substrate imposes a magnetoelastic anisotropy on the spin cycloid, which establishes preferred cycloid propagation directions. The energy landscape of the cycloid is shaped by both the ferroelectric degree of freedom and strain-induced anisotropy, restricting the spin spiral propagation vector to changes to specific switching events.