Chirality-driven ferroelectricity in LiCuVO 4

2019 
Chirality or the handedness of objects is of prime importance in life science, biology, chemistry, and physics. It is also a major symmetry ingredient in frustrated magnets revealing spin-spiral ground states. Vector-chiral phases, with the twist (either clock- or counter clock-wise) between neighboring spins being ordered, but with disorder with respect to the angles between adjacent spins, have been predicted almost five decades ago. Experimental proofs, however, are rare and controversial. Here, we provide experimental evidence for such a phase in LiCuVO4, a one-dimensional quantum magnet with competing ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic interactions. The vector-chiral state is identified via a finite ferroelectric polarization arising at temperatures well above the multiferroic phase exhibiting long-range three-dimensional spin-spiral and polar order. On increasing temperatures, spin order becomes suppressed at TN, whereas chiral long-range order still exist, leaving a temperature window with chirality-driven ferroelectricity in the presence of an external magnetic field.
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