In physics, ferroics is the generic name given to the study of ferromagnets, ferroelectrics, and ferroelastics.
The basis of ferroics is to understand the large changes in physical characteristics that occur over a very narrow temperature range. The changes in physical characteristics occur when phase transitions take place around some critical temperature value, normally denoted by
Tc
Tc
In ferroelectrics, upon lowering the temperature below
Tc
1024
\left(x,y,z\right)
\left(-x,-y,-z\right)
Ferromagnets is a term that most people are familiar with, and, as with ferroelastics, the spontaneous magnetization of a ferromagnet can be attributed to a breaking of point symmetry in switching from the paramagnetic to the ferromagnetic phase. In this case,
Tc
In ferroelastic crystals, in going from the nonferroic (or prototypic phase) to the ferroic phase, a spontaneous strain is induced. An example of a ferroelastic phase transition is when the crystal structure spontaneously changes from a tetragonal structure (a square prism shape) to a monoclinic structure (a general parallelepiped). Here the shapes of the unit cell before and after the phase transition are different, and hence a strain is induced within the bulk.
In recent years, multiferroics have been attracting increased interest. These materials exhibit more than one ferroic property simultaneously in a single phase. A fourth ferroic order termed ferrotoroidic order has also been proposed.[1]