Magnetically induced ferroelectricity in Cu2MnSnS4 and Cu2MnSnSe4
Tetsuya Fukushima, Kunihiko Yamauchi, and Silvia Picozzi

TL;DR
This study combines Landau theory and ab initio calculations to analyze magnetically-induced ferroelectricity in Cu2MnSnS4 and Cu2MnSnSe4, revealing an electronic origin driven mainly by Heisenberg exchange interactions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that ferroelectricity in these compounds is primarily electronically driven with minimal ionic displacement, highlighting the role of Cu magnetic moments and anion type in polarization.
Findings
Ferroelectric polarization is mainly driven by Heisenberg exchange interactions.
Ionic displacements are very small, indicating an electronic origin of ferroelectricity.
Se-based compound exhibits higher polarization due to better Mn-Mn interaction mediation.
Abstract
We investigate magnetically-induced ferroelectricity in Cu2MnSnS4 by means of Landau theory of phase transitions and of ab initio density functional theory. As expected from the Landau approach, ab initio calculations show that a non-zero ferroelectric polarization P along the y direction is induced by the peculiar antiferromagnetic configuration of Mn spins occurring in Cu2MnSnS4. The comparison between P, calculated either via density-functional-theory or according to Landau approach, clearly shows that ferroelectricity is mainly driven by Heisenberg-exchange terms and only to a minor extent by relativistic terms. At variance with previous examples of collinear antiferromagnets with magnetically-induced ferroelectricity (such as AFM-E HoMnO3), the ionic displacements occurring upon magnetic ordering are very small, so that the exchange-striction mechanism (i.e. displacement of ions so…
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