Pyrocurrent anomalies and intrinsic magnetodielectric behavior near room temperature in Li2Ni2Mo3O12, a compound with distorted honeycomb and spin-chains

Abstract Keeping current interests to identify materials with intrinsic magnetodielectric behaviour near room temperature and with novel pyroelectric current anomalies, we report temperature and magnetic-field dependent behavior of complex dielectric permittivity and pyroelectric current for an oxid...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sanjay Kumar Upadhyay, Kartik K. Iyer, Smita Gohil, Shankar Ghosh, P. L. Paulose, E. V. Sampathkumaran
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017-06-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04025-9
Description
Summary:Abstract Keeping current interests to identify materials with intrinsic magnetodielectric behaviour near room temperature and with novel pyroelectric current anomalies, we report temperature and magnetic-field dependent behavior of complex dielectric permittivity and pyroelectric current for an oxide, Li2Ni2Mo3O12, containing magnetic ions with (distorted) honey-comb and chain arrangement and ordering magnetically below 8 K. The dielectric data reveal the existence of relaxor ferroelectricity behaviour in the range 160–240 K and there are corresponding Raman mode anomalies as well in this temperature range. Pyrocurrent behavior is also consistent with this interpretation, with the pyrocurrent peak-temperature interestingly correlating with the poling temperature. 7Li NMR offer an evidence for crystallographic disorder intrinsic to this compound and we therefore conclude that such a disorder is apparently responsible for the randomness of local electric field leading to relaxor ferroelectric property. Another observation of emphasis is that there is a notable decrease in the dielectric constant with the application of magnetic field to the tune of about −2.4% at 300 K, with the magnitude varying marginally with temperature. Small loss factor values validate the intrinsic behaviour of the magnetodielectric effect at room temperature.
ISSN:2045-2322