Publication | Open Access
Magnetic frustration control through tunable stereochemically driven disorder in entropy-stabilized oxides
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Citations
46
References
2019
Year
EngineeringMagnetic ResonanceEntropy-stabilized OxidesChemistryMagnetoresistanceMagnetismQuantum MaterialsStructural DisorderMagnetic Frustration ControlMaterials SciencePhysicsPhysical ChemistryMagnetic MaterialCrystallographyMagnetic LatticeQuantum MagnetismSpintronicsFerromagnetismMolecule-based MagnetEntropyNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsMagnetic PropertyFunctional Materials
Entropy-stabilized oxides possess a large configurational entropy that allows for the unique ability to include typically immiscible concentrations of species in different configurations. Particularly in oxides, where the physical behavior is strongly correlated to stereochemistry and electronic structure, entropic stabilization creates a unique platform to tailor the interplay of extreme structural and chemical disorder to realize unprecedented functionalities. Here, we control stereochemically driven structural disorder in single crystalline, rocksalt, (MgCoNiCuZn)O-type entropy-stabilized oxides through the incorporation of ${\mathrm{Cu}}^{2+}$ cations. We harness the disorder to tune the degree of glassiness in the antiferromagnetic structure. Structural distortions driven by the Jahn-Teller effect lead to a difference in valence on the Co cation sites, which extends to dilution and disorder of the magnetic lattice. A spin glass model reveals that the fractional spin ordering of the magnetic lattice can be tuned by \ensuremath{\sim}65%. These findings demonstrate entropy-stabilization as a tool for control of functional phenomena.
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