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Hexagonal manganites REMnO3 (RE, rare earths) have attracted significant attention due to their potential applications as multiferroic materials and the intriguing physics associated with the topological defects. The two-dimensional (2D) and 3D domain and vortex structure evolution of REMnO3 is predicted using the phase-field method based on a thermodynamic potential constructed from first-principles calculations. In 3D spaces, vortex lines show three types of topological changes, i.e. shrinking, coalescence, and splitting, with the latter two caused by the interaction and exchange of vortex loops. Compared to the coarsening rate of the isotropic XY model, the six-fold degeneracy gives rise to negligible differences with the vortex-antivortex annihilation controlling the scaling dynamics, whereas the anisotropy of interfacial energy results in a deviation. The temporal evolution of domain and vortex structures serves as a platform to fully explore the mesoscale mechanisms for the 0-D and 1-D topological defects.
An incommensurate phase refers to a solid state in which the period of a superstructure is incommensurable with the primitive unit cell. Recently the incommensurate phase is induced by applying an in-plane strain to hexagonal manganites, which demons
Time-resolved Kerr microscopy is used to study the excitations of individual micron- scale ferromagnetic thin film elements in their remnant state. Thin (18 nm) square elements with edge dimensions between 1 and 10 $mu$m form closure domain structure
Using first-principles calculations we examine the band structures of ferromagnetic hexagonal manganites $mathrm{YXO_3}$ (X=V, Cr, Mn, Fe and Co) in the nonpolar nonsymmorphic $P6_3/mmc$ space group. For $mathrm{YVO_3}$ and $mathrm{YCrO_3}$ we find a
Field-induced switching of ferroelectric domains with a topological vortex configuration is studied by atomic imaging and electrical biasing in an electron microscope, revealing the role of topological defects on the topologically-guided change of domain-wall pairs in a hexagonal manganite.
Ferroelectric domain walls are attracting broad attention as atomic-scale switches, diodes and mobile wires for next-generation nanoelectronics. Charged domain walls in improper ferroelectrics are particularly interesting as they offer multifunctiona