Abstract
Hexagonal LuFe2O4 is a promising charge order (CO) driven multiferroic material with high charge and spin-ordering temperatures. The coexisting charge and spin orders on Fe3+/Fe2+ sites result in magnetoelectric behaviors, but the coupling mechanism between the charge and spin orders remains elusive. Here, by tuning external pressure, we reveal three charge-ordered phases with suggested correlation to magnetic orders in LuFe2O4: (i) a centrosymmetric incommensurate three-dimensional CO with ferrimagnetism, (ii) a non-centrosymmetric incommensurate quasi-two-dimensional CO with ferrimagnetism, and (iii) a centrosymmetric commensurate CO with antiferromagnetism. Experimental in situ single-crystal X-ray diffraction and X-ray magnetic circular dichroism measurements combined with density functional theory calculations suggest that the charge density redistribution caused by pressure-induced compression in the frustrated double-layer [Fe2O4] cluster is responsible for the correlated spin-charge phase transitions. The pressure-enhanced effective Coulomb interactions among Fe-Fe bonds drive the frustrated (1/3, 1/3) CO to a less frustrated (1/4, 1/4) CO, which induces the ferrimagnetic to antiferromagnetic transition. Our results not only elucidate the coupling mechanism among charge, spin, and lattice degrees of freedom in LuFe2O4, but also provide a new way to tune the spin-charge orders in a highly controlled manner.
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Introduction
Multiferroic materials have attracted lots of research interests during the last decades because of their great potential applications in electronic devices and spintronics1,2. Hexagonal LuFe2O4 is a promising candidate material for charge order (CO) driven multiferroicity, which has been intensively investigated both from fundamental and applied perspectives3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10. Previous X-ray diffraction (XRD)4 and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) measurements11,12 have suggested that LuFe2O4 exhibits three-dimensional (3D) CO at ambient pressure, manifesting a periodic arrangement of low-valence (Fe2+) and high-valence (Fe3+) ions. Possible evidence for CO-driven ferroelectricity of LuFe2O4 was also reported3,13,14, although its origin remains debated15. In addition to the 3D order of Fe2+-Fe3+ ions observed below the CO transition temperature TCO (~320 K), a quasi-2D (Q2D) ordering of Fe2+-Fe3+ was also observed above TCO persisting up to ~525 K12. Furthermore, neutron diffraction measurements have revealed the ferrimagnetic order of Fe moments below the Neel transition temperature TN (~240 K)16. It is therefore suggested that the correlations between charge and magnetic order associated with Fe2+ and Fe3+ ions may play a crucial role in the multiferroicity in LuFe2O44,17,18,19,20.
Application of external pressure is a powerful and clean tool to gain deep insights into the interplay between the charge, magnetic and structural degrees of freedom, because the strong frustration involved in the spin and charge orders in the triangular lattice of LuFe2O4 may result in high tunable ground states17,20. However, high-pressure diffraction measurements are often difficult owing to the reduced beam flux and increased background caused by pressure cells. Previous neutron diffraction measurements on powder samples of LuFe2O4 revealed a ~30% reduction of the ferrimagnetic ordered-moments up to ~3 GPa21, and X-ray powder diffraction showed indications for pressure-induced structural phase transitions22. However, the positions and intensities of superlattice reflections observed in powder diffraction showed non-systematic evolution with increasing pressure, probably due to poor powder averaging, thus preventing an accurate description of the pressure-induced phases22. Moreover, neutron and X-ray powder diffraction measurements have revealed a high-pressure polymorph phase LuFe2O4-hp23,24 above 12 GPa. The LuFe2O4-hp phase retained its structure after pressure release, thus allowing ex-situ measurement at ambient pressure23,24. This LuFe2O4-hp phase adopts a rectangular Fe lattice24 and is not directly relevant to the frustrated triangular lattice of LuFe2O4 at ambient conditions. Therefore, despite the intensive efforts, the pressure-dependent evolution of the frustrated charge and magnetic interactions in the multiferroic LuFe2O4 remains unclear.
Here, we investigated the evolution of charge orders under pressure and the accompanied spin orders in LuFe2O4 using the in situ high-pressure single-crystal X-ray diffraction (HP-SXD) and high-pressure X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (HP-XMCD) spectroscopy. A series of pressure-induced charge order phases, including a Q2D CO phase below 5.5 GPa and a 3D CO phase at higher pressure (6.0–12.6 GPa), were identified by HP-SXD measurements. In addition, the HP-XMCD measurements suggest that the Q2D and 3D CO phases are associated with non-zero and zero net magnetization, respectively, which is interpreted as indicative of ferrimagnetic and antiferromagnetic orders. The pressure-induced charge- and magnetic-order phase transitions can be further interpreted by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. These results suggest that the CO phases are intimately coupled with magnetism, both of which can be manipulated by external pressure in a highly controlled manner in hexagonal layered multiferroic LuFe2O4.
Results
Crystal structure and SXD diffraction patterns
LuFe2O4 adopts a bi-layered triangular lattice structure with space group R-3m (No. 166) at ambient pressure. Considering the CO and the atomic displacement it induces, the trigonal lattice splits into three 120o twinned monoclinic lattices, each of which adopts the space group C2/m (No.12). The transformation between the trigonal and monoclinic lattices is shown in Fig. 1a. The optimal stoichiometry of our sample was confirmed by magnetic susceptibility and transmission electron microscopes measurements at ambient pressure (See Supplementary Fig. 1 and Note 1). Our high-pressure synchrotron X-ray diffraction measurement of LuFe2O4 (See Supplementary Methods and Supplementary Fig. 2) was carried out on a high-quality single-crystalline sample. Within the representation of space group C2/m (See details in Supplementary Fig. 3 and Note 3), the lattice parameters are a = 5.957(2) Å, b = 3.434(4) Å, c = 8.642(3) Å, and β = 103.28(2) ° at 300 K and 0.8 GPa. The lattice parameters a, b, and c shrink with increasing pressure. At 300 K and 12.6 GPa, the lattice parameters become a = 5.809(5) Å, b = 3.339(16) Å, c = 8.374(11) Å, and β = 103.39(9) ° with a volume reduction of 8.2(6)%.
Charge order phase transition under pressure
Apart from the lattice shrinkage, a series of superlattice peaks were also observed with a wave vector kAP = (1/3, 1/3, 3/2)T in trigonal lattice or (0, 2/3, 1/2)M in the monoclinic lattice at 0.8 GPa, as illustrated in Fig. 1b and Fig. 1f. This wave vector is close to that observed at ambient pressure where the charge order of low-valence (Fe2+) and high-valence (Fe3+) Fe ions forms a \(\sqrt 3 \times \sqrt 3 \times 2\) superlattice4 (Fig. 2b). As pressure further increases, the superlattice peaks exhibit drastic broadening along the L-direction (Fig.1b–d), indicating that the charge order becomes quasi-two-dimensional. Meanwhile, the maximum peak intensity in the L-direction moves from half-integer (L = n + 1/2) at ambient pressure to integer (L = n) at 5.0 GPa (see Fig. 1d–g and details in Supplementary Fig. 4 and Note 4), indicating that the inter-plane polarization emerges under pressure (Fig. 2d). Interestingly, similar quasi-two-dimensional charge order was also observed above the 3D charge ordering temperature of 320 K in LuFe2O4 at ambient pressure4.
A closer inspection of the diffraction pattern actually reveals a tiny incommensurability of the charge order wave vector [kAP = (1/3+δ, 1/3+δ, 3/2)T and k2D = (1/3−δ, 1/3−δ, 0)T] at 0.8 GPa. The incommensurability increases dramatically with increasing pressure and eventually reaches a commensurate position kHP = (1/4, 1/4, 0)T at pressures above 6.0 GPa. In contrast to the broadened diffraction patterns along the L-direction for the superstructure below 5.0 GPa (Fig. 1d), the (1/4, 1/4, 0)T phase shows sharp peak features both along the in-plane (HK) and out-of-plane (L) directions (Fig. 1e, h), indicating restoration of robust 3D order. Meanwhile, the sharpening of the emerging (1/4, 1/4, 0)T peak in the 3D CO phase also rules out the possibility of non-hydrostaticity as the reason why the intermediate quasi-2D CO phase shows a broadening of peaks along L-directions. This commensurate 3D CO-HP phase persists up to 12.6 GPa without a major change in the primary structure. Interestingly, the pressure dependence of resistivity also shows a kink feature at around 6 GPa, indicative of the (1/3, 1/3) to (1/4, 1/4) phase transition (see Supplementary Fig. 5 and Note 5).
The evolution of the incommensurability of the superlattice peaks in the HK-plane under various pressures is summarized in Fig. 1i. There are three 120-degree twinned charge orders in LuFe2O4, each with a unique k-vector, therefore the superlattice peak position differs for each charge order twin, forming a spiral-like diffraction pattern in reciprocal space. As pressure increases, the centers of charge order peaks move away from (1/3, 1/3) along the 120-degree directions in the HK-plane and eventually reach (1/4, 1/4), (1/2, 1/4), (1/4, 1/2) at 6.0 GPa. Therefore, the quasi-2D charge order phase observed in the 3.1 to 5.0 GPa range can be regarded as an intermediate phase between the commensurate (1/3, 1/3) and (1/4, 1/4) charge order phases.
We now discuss the possible charge order models for the high-pressure phases. We consider two valence states of Fe ions (Fe2+ and Fe3+). Based on diffraction data, we found that the charge order of (1/4, 1/4, 0)T phase can be best described with the Pb2/c (BNS 13.71) black-white space group (see Fig. 2e–f and details in Supplementary Fig. 6, Table 1, and Note 6). The CO phase models of CO-AP [kAP = (1/3, 1/3, 3/2)T], CO-2D [k2D = (1/3, 1/3, 0)T], and CO-HP [kHP = (1/4, 1/4, 0)T] are illustrated in Fig. 2a–f, respectively. These CO models are further supported by DFT calculation (Fig. 4d). The evolution from (1/3, 1/3)T to (1/4, 1/4)T can be understood through the Coulomb interactions on different types of Fe-Fe bonds. In CO-AP and CO-2D phases, 5/9 of the nearest-neighbor (NN), 2/3 of the second NN, and 5/9 of the third NN Fe bonds are Fe2+-Fe3+ bonds. On the contrary, in the CO-HP phase, 2/3 of the NN, 2/3 of the second NN, and 1/3 of the third NN Fe bonds are Fe2+-Fe3+ bonds. The above observation provides a natural understanding, that the effective Coulomb interactions of NN and third NN Fe-Fe pairs are tuned by the compression in frustrated triangular double-layer Fe2O4 structure due to increased pressure. We also calculated the interlayer next-nearest-neighbor (VcNNN) and intralayer nearest-neighbor (VabNN) Coulomb interactions at each pressure point. Our result shows that VcNNN/VabNN remains almost unchanged in the region of 1 to 5 GPa, and drops sharply above 6 GPa where the (1/4, 1/4)T CO phase is favored25 (see Supplementary Fig. 7 and Note 7). We note that the observed high pressure (1/4, 1/4, 0) CO in LuFe2O4 is different from the (1/4, 1/4) CO phase revealed by transmission electron microscopy in YFe2O4 at ambient pressure26. Later X-ray diffraction experiments suggested that this CO phase is actually characterized by (1/4, 1/2, 1/4) with a triclinic supercell four times larger along the c-axis27.
Magnetic phase transition under pressure
In order to inform on the magnetic ground states associated with these charge-ordered phases, we utilized HP-XMCD spectroscopy to monitor the change of net magnetization of LuFe2O4 under pressure. Figure 3a shows Fe K-edge isotropic absorption (XAS) and dichroic (XMCD) signals in LuFe2O4 at 100 K and 5 T. The measurements were performed at the Fe K-edge instead of the more commonly used Fe L-edge because soft X-ray MCD is incompatible with the highly absorbing diamond anvil cell environment28,29,30. The dichroic signal at 1.9 GPa consists of a positive peak in the pre-edge region (7114.0 eV) and another positive peak near the main rising edge peak (7129.0 eV) with larger intensity (Fig. 3a). With increasing pressure, these two dichroic peaks become weaker at 4.3 GPa, and these two peaks are not observed at the higher pressure of 9.5 GPa. The peaks of Fe K-edge XAS and XMCD signals observed at 1.9 GPa are in agreement with those observed at ambient pressure (see Supplementary Fig. 8 and Note 8)31. Therefore, the magnetic order at 1.9 GPa is best interpreted as a ferrimagnetic structure which was unveiled by the previous L-edge XMCD19 and neutron diffraction16 measurements at ambient pressure. The weaker XMCD signals observed at 4.3 GPa indicate reduced net magnetization compared to 1.9 GPa. In previous high-pressure neutron powder diffraction measurements, it is shown that the ferrimagnetic order of LuFe2O4 is preserved below 3 GPa while the ordered-moments gradually reduced from 4.5 μB/Fe to 3 μB/Fe21. Therefore, the proportionally reduced XMCD signal at 4.3 GPa is best interpreted by the same ferrimagnetic structure and further reduced magnetic ordered-moments, which could be related to pressure-induced magnetic disorders. The zero XMCD signal at 9.5 GPa indicates zero net magnetization, suggesting an antiferromagnetic ground state in the HP-CO phase, which is further discussed in the DFT calculation results. Insets of Fig. 3a–c illustrate the pre-edge region of XAS and XMCD signals. The positions of the XAS pre-edge peak and leading edge do not shift by pressure, which indicates that the valence ratio of Fe2+ and Fe3+ remains unchanged (see Supplementary Fig. 9), in agreement with the CO models illustrated in Fig. 2.
Discussion
More insight into the nature of the magnetic ground states associated with the CO phases in pressurized LuFe2O4 can be also obtained by DFT calculations. For the CO-AP phase and CO-2D phase, DFT calculations show that LuFe2O4 adopts the “2:1 ferrimagnetic state” as the ground state. In this state, as shown in Fig. 3d, e, the majority spin orientation consists of all Fe2+ ions plus one-third of total Fe3+ ions, while the minority spin orientation consists of the remaining Fe3+ ions. DFT calculation shows that the antiferromagnetic structure in Fig. 3f is the preferred magnetic ground state for the CO-HP phase (see Supplementary Fig. 10). In this state, both Fe2+ and Fe3+ are evenly separated in opposite spin orientations, resulting in the centrosymmetric electromagnetic order, and thus leading to a zero net magnetic moment in this phase. Therefore, this DFT calculation result is consistent with the XMCD measurement, showing that the net magnetization of frustrated LuFe2O4 is completely suppressed at 9.5 GPa in the CO-HP phase.
Combining the HP-SXD, HP-XMCD, and DFT calculations, we have found a series of 3D-2D-3D charge order transitions in the hexagonal LuFe2O4. The emergence of the CO-HP phase at high pressure appears to be accompanied by a ferrimagnetic to antiferromagnetic transition (Fig. 3d–f). We calculate the pressure dependence of the enthalpy for each spin-charge-ordered phase using GGA + U method32,33, as illustrated in Fig. 4d. According to the calculation, at ambient pressure, the 3D centrosymmetric CO phase (CO-AP) combined with 2:1 ferrimagnetic order (Fig. 3d) is most favored. Then, as the lattice shrinks with applying hydrostatic pressure (Fig. 4a), a 2D non-centrosymmetric CO phase (CO-2D) with 2:1 ferrimagnetic order (Fig. 3e) becomes the ground state. At higher pressure, a 3D centrosymmetric CO phase (CO-HP) with antiferromagnetic order (Fig. 3f) becomes the ground state. During the CO-AP to CO-2D phase transition, the Fe-Fe bonds within the [Fe2O4] bilayer structure are compressed by pressure. Such compression enhanced the Coulomb interaction among bilayer Fe-Fe bonds, thus enhancing the hopping matrix elements between low-valence and high-valence Fe sites in the frustrated lattice, which could result in damping of out-of-plane correlations and incommensurability in ab-plane (Fig. 1b–d). As the pressure further increases, the effective Coulomb interaction among Fe-Fe bonds reaches a critical point where the Q = (1/3, 1/3) charge orders cannot be sustained. Thus the system evolves into a less frustrated Q = (1/4, 1/4) CO-HP charge order where all Fe layers are charge neutral. Due to the suggested strong coupling between charge and spin correlations, such drastic redistribution of charge density, in turn, causes a substantial change in the magnitude of spin–spin interactions. As a result, the magnetic moments on Fe2+ and Fe3+ are re-arranged and the magnetic structure evolves from ferrimagnetism to antiferromagnetic order. The DFT calculations and experimental evidence indicate that the observed charge ordering and magnetic transitions are coupled and strongly correlated with the compression of the crystalline lattice.
In summary, we have conducted a systematic study on the evolution of the crystal structure and charge orders and their accompanied spin orders in hexagonal LuFe2O4 under pressure using the in situ HP-SXD and HP-XMCD measurements. With increasing pressure, the system exhibits three correlated charge-ordered ground states: (1) the centrosymmetric 3D CO-AP phase with ferrimagnetic order, (2) the non-centrosymmetric CO-2D phase with ferrimagnetic order, and (3) the centrosymmetric 3D CO-HP phase with antiferromagnetic order. These results suggest a strong coupling between charge and magnetic orders in hexagonal LuFe2O4. The evolution of the charge and magnetic order under pressure is further supported by the DFT calculations, which show that the phase transitions are the result of tuned frustrated charge and spin interactions induced by the compression of triangular Fe2O4 double-layer structures. Our results provide important insights on realizing the potential charge order induced multiferroicity in LuFe2O4, and also suggest that hydrostatic pressure is a powerful tool to unveil charge and magnetic order states in similar systems such as RFe2O4 (R = Y, Yb…), where competition between different types of charge orders has been already observed at ambient pressure26,27,34,35,36. It is, therefore, particularly interesting to investigate if similar ferroelectric (1/3, 1/3, 0) CO or (1/4, 1/4, 0) CO could be achieved in RFe2O4 materials through applying external pressure or chemical doping.
Methods
Sample preparation
Single crystals of LuFe2O4 were grown by the floating-zone method using a CO/CO2 (~2.7:1) mixed atmosphere to control oxygen stoichiometry. Our electron probe micro analyzer (EPMA) measurement on the single-crystalline sample shows almost optimal stoichiometry of Lu1.01(1)Fe2O3.97(4).
High-pressure measurement
Single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SXD) experiment was conducted at synchrotron radiation beamline 13BM-C, Advanced Photon Source (APS), Argonne National Lab (ANL), using monochromatic X-rays with 0.434 Å wavelength, with the pressure increasing from 0.8 GPa up to 14.5 GPa. The 1-deg step scan, wide-step scan, and whole-range scan were performed with a scanning angle range of ±35 degrees at each pressure point37. Symmetry analysis was conducted using Sarah software38 and Bilbao Crystallographic Server39, and structure refinements were conducted using FULLPROF program suite40. High-pressure synchrotron X-ray Magnetic Circular Dichroism (XMCD) spectroscopy measurements with the energy scanning across the Fe K-edge were conducted at beamline 4ID-D, APS, and ANL. Circularly polarized X-rays were generated with a diamond phase retarder. To obtain the XMCD signal, the X-ray helicity was modulated at 13.1 Hz, and XMCD signals were detected with a phase lock-in amplifier. In addition, XMCD scans were repeated with opposite applied field direction to ensure artifact-free XMCD signals41. Corresponding to the three observed CO phases in pressurized LuFe2O4, the XMCD data were collected at 1.9, 4.3, and 9.5 GPa. In these measurements, a magnetic field was set to +5T/−5T and the temperature to 100 K. X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy (XAS) data is collected simultaneously during the XMCD measurement and obtained by averaging X-ray absorption for opposite X-ray helicities. The pressure was determined by the in situ ruby fluorescence measurement system42 with a pressure uncertainty of less than 5%. An offline ruby system was used in the SXD measurement, before and after each manual pressure change at ambient temperature. For the low-temperature XMCD measurements, online membrane and ruby fluorescence systems were used to apply and measure pressure, respectively (See details in supplementary Methods).
Density functional theory (DFT) calculations
The first-principle density functional theory calculations are based on the projector augmented wave (PAW) method43 encoded in the Vienna ab initio simulation package (VASP)44. The exchange-correlation functional of the Perdew–Becke–Erzenh (PBE)45 form is adopted and the plane-wave cutoff energy is set to 500 eV. To properly describe the strong electron correlation in the Fe 3d states, the GGA plus on-site repulsion U method (GGA + U)32 was employed with the effective U value (Ueff = U − J) of 4 eV. Calculations with various Ueff show that the main results remain valid when Ueff is varied between ~3.1 and 5.5 eV. The structural optimizations are carried out until the forces acting on atoms are smaller than 0.01 eVÅ−1. To obtain the energy of each charge order structure, GGA + U calculations were carried out in two steps33. For each charge order structure, we first optimize the chosen charge order structure using a large U (e.g., Ueff = 7.5 eV). Then we re-optimize the charge order structure with a smaller U (i.e., Ueff = 4 eV) using the converged charge densities obtained with the large U. It is noted that a larger Ueff was employed only to generate an initial charge density with the desired charge order structure. The enthalpies of each charge order phase under various pressure are calculated by the following expression: H = U – PV, where H is enthalpy, U is total energy, and PV is the product of pressure and volume. For each CO phase, atomic positions were relaxed while the lattice constants are constrained at the experimental values (see Fig. 4a and Supplementary Fig. 11).
Data availability
The data supporting this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. U1930401, 12074071, 51772184, and 11991060) and the National Key Research Program of China (2016YFA0300702). We acknowledge Dr. Lili Zhang, Dr. Sheng Jiang, and Dr. Aiguo Li of 15U1 at SSRF and Dr. Changyong Park at HPCAT, APS, ANL for the technical support on the high-pressure XRD experiment. Gas loading by Sergey N. Tkachev is also acknowledged. HPCAT operations are supported by DOE-NNSA under Award No. DE-NA0001974 and DOE-BES under Award No. DE-FG02-99ER45775, with partial instrumentation funding by NSF. The SXD measurement was conducted at 13BM-C, APS, and ANL. 13BM-C operation is supported by COMPRES through the Partnership for Extreme Crystallography (PX2) project, under NSF Cooperative Agreement EAR-1661511, and by GSECARS under NSF EAR-1634415. The XMCD experiment was conducted at beamline 4ID-D, APS, and ANL. This research used resources from the Advanced Photon Source, a US Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility operated for the DOE Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357.
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W.W., J.S., and W.Y. proposed and conceived this project. F.L., D.Z., and W.Y. conducted high-pressure SXD experiments. F.L., G.F., D.H., Y.Z., and W.Y. conducted high-pressure XMCD experiments. Y.H., F.L., W.W., J.Z., L.Y., and W.Y. analyzed the data. J.N. and H.X. performed the DFT calculations. S.C., X.X., and X.L. offer valuable discussion during this project. F.L., Y.H., W.W., W.Y., and J.S. wrote the original version of the manuscript and received feedback from all authors. F.L., Y.H., and J.N. contributed equally to this work.
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Liu, F., Hao, Y., Ni, J. et al. Pressure-induced charge orders and their postulated coupling to magnetism in hexagonal multiferroic LuFe2O4. npj Quantum Mater. 8, 1 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41535-022-00522-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41535-022-00522-x