magnetoelectricity
Magnetoelectricity is a phenomenon in which magnetic and electric properties are coupled within a material, allowing the control of magnetic states using electric fields and vice versa. This effect is primarily observed in multiferroic materials that exhibit more than one ferroic order parameter, such as ferromagnetism and ferroelectricity. The magnetoelectric effect can be linear, where an applied electric field induces a magnetic polarization or an applied magnetic field influences electric polarization, or nonlinear in nature.
The concept was first theoretically proposed in the late 1950s and experimentally confirmed in the 1960s, with
Mechanisms responsible for magnetoelectricity include exchange interactions, lattice coupling, and spin-orbit coupling, often influenced by the
Despite significant progress, natural magnetoelectric materials are relatively rare, prompting ongoing research into engineered composites, thin