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Room temperature dielectric and magnetic properties of Gd and Ti co-doped BiFeO3 ceramics

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TLDR
In this article, room temperature dielectric and magnetic properties of BiFeO3 samples, co-doped with magnetic Gd and non-magnetic Ti in place of Bi and Fe, respectively, were reported.
Abstract
Room temperature dielectric and magnetic properties of BiFeO3 samples, co-doped with magnetic Gd and non-magnetic Ti in place of Bi and Fe, respectively, were reported. The nominal compositions of Bi0.9Gd0.1Fe1–xTixO3 (x = 0.00-0.25) ceramics were synthesized by conventional solid state reaction technique. X-ray diffraction patterns revealed that the substitution of Fe by Ti induces a phase transition from rhombohedral to orthorhombic at x > 0.20. Morphological studies demonstrated that the average grain size was reduced from ∼1.5 μm to ∼200 nm with the increase in Ti content. Due to Ti substitution, the dielectric constant was stable over a wide range of high frequencies (30 kHz to 20 MHz) by suppressing the dispersion at low frequencies. The dielectric properties of the compounds are associated with their improved morphologies and reduced leakage current densities probably due to the lower concentration of oxygen vacancies in the compositions. Magnetic properties of Bi0.9Gd0.1Fe1–xTixO3 (x = 0.00-0.25) ceramics measured at room temperature were enhanced with Ti substitution up to 20% compared to that of pure BiFeO3 and Ti undoped Bi0.9Gd0.1FeO3 samples. The enhanced magnetic properties might be attributed to the substitution induced suppression of spiral spin structure of BiFeO3. An asymmetric shifts both in the field and magnetization axes of magnetization versus magnetic field curves was observed. This indicates the presence of exchange bias effect in these compounds notably at room temperature.

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References
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Multiferroic and magnetoelectric materials

TL;DR: A ferroelectric crystal exhibits a stable and switchable electrical polarization that is manifested in the form of cooperative atomic displacements that arises through the quantum mechanical phenomenon of exchange.
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Multiferroics: a magnetic twist for ferroelectricity

TL;DR: It is found that even a weak magnetoelectric interaction can lead to spectacular cross-coupling effects when it induces electric polarization in a magnetically ordered state.
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Physics and Applications of Bismuth Ferrite

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarize both the basic physics and unresolved aspects of BiFeO3 and device applications, which center on spintronics and memory devices that can be addressed both electrically and magnetically.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spiral magnetic ordering in bismuth ferrite

TL;DR: In this article, the magnetic ordering of the iron ions in bismuth ferrite BiFeO3 was obtained by a study with a high-resolution time-of-flight neutron diffractometer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Weak ferromagnetism and magnetoelectric coupling in bismuth ferrite

TL;DR: In this paper, the coupling between the ferroelectric and magnetic order parameters in the magnetoelectric multiferroic was analyzed using density functional theory within the local spin density approximation (LSDA) and the $\mathrm{LSDA}+\mathm{U}$ method.
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