Coexisting charge modulation and ferromagnetism produces long period phases in manganites: new example of electronic soft matter
G.C. Milward, M.J. Calderon, P.B. Littlewood

TL;DR
This paper presents a phenomenological Ginzburg-Landau model explaining the coexistence of charge modulation and ferromagnetism in manganites, revealing new thermodynamic phases and suggesting a broader class of electronically soft matter.
Contribution
It introduces a thermodynamic framework for understanding coexisting charge and magnetic orders, challenging disorder-based models and proposing a unified view of complex phases in correlated materials.
Findings
Coexistence of charge modulation and ferromagnetism explained by a Ginzburg-Landau model.
Identification of new thermodynamic phases with textured order.
Implication that similar phenomena may occur in other correlated electronic systems.
Abstract
The phenomenon of colossal magnetoresistance in manganites is generally agreed to be a result of competition between crystal phases with different electronic, magnetic, and structural order; a competition which can be strong enough to cause phase separation between metallic ferromagnet and insulating charge modulated states. Nevertheless, closer inspection of phase diagrams in many manganites reveals complex phases where the two order parameters of magnetism and charge modulation unexpectedly coexist. Here we show that such experiments can be naturally explained within a phenomenological Ginzburg-Landau theory. In contrast to models where phase separation originates from disorder or as a strain induced kinetic phenomenon, we argue that magnetic and charge modulation coexist in new thermodynamic phases. This leads to a rich diagram of equilibrium phases, qualitatively similar to those…
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