Abstract

This paper reports on a study of the magnetic properties, magnetoresistance, and phase transitions in the semiconducting manganite multiferroics Tb0.95Bi0.05MnO3 and Eu0.8Ce0.2Mn2O5 whose dielectric properties have been a subject of an earlier study. An analysis of these properties has led us to the conclusion that the above crystals at temperatures T ≥ 180 K undergo phase separation with the formation of a dynamic periodic alternation of quasi-2D layers of manganese ions in different valence states, i.e., charge-induced ferroelectricity. This state exhibits a giant permittivity and ferromagnetism in the layers containing Mn3+ and Mn4+ ions. At low temperatures (T < 100 K), the phase volume is occupied primarily by the dielectric phase. Studies of the magnetic properties and the effect of the magnetic field on the dielectric properties of crystals substantiate the scenario of the formation of a state with giant permittivity put forward by us. At low temperatures, Tb0.95Bi0.05MnO3 exhibits features at the points of phase transitions in pure TbMnO3. A ferromagnetic moment is observed to exist at all the temperatures covered. At the boundaries of the quasi-2D layers, magnetic-field-induced jumps of the electrical resistivity caused by metamagnetic transitions in the layers with Mn3+ and Mn4+ ions are observed. At temperatures T ≥ 180 K, the electrical resistivity undergoes a periodic variation in a magnetic field which is a manifestation of carrier self-organization. A high magnetic field is capable of shifting the phase transition from 180 K to higher temperatures and inducing additional phase transitions.

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