| Literature DB >> 30297803 |
M J Coak1,2,3, C R S Haines4, C Liu5, D M Jarvis5, P B Littlewood6,7, S S Saxena8,9.
Abstract
In this work we report for the first time measurements of the dielectric loss of single-crystal SrTiO3 under the application of hydrostatic pressure up to 20 kbar and temperatures down to 200 mK which allow us to comment on the evolution of new fundamental material properties and their relationship with the recently discovered quantum critical phenomena in this material. The well known 18 K peak or shoulder was no longer observed after pressure was applied, even after subsequently removing it, suggesting it is associated with the twin walls formed at the 110 K cubic-tetragonal transition. The family of familiar peaks were all seen to increase in temperature linearly with pressure and the height of the 9.4 K peak was drastically suppressed by even the smallest pressures. This peak is discussed in the context of a postulated ferroelectric quantum critical point in SrTiO3 and the behaviour of its size linked to the position of this point on the recently established phase diagram.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30297803 PMCID: PMC6175889 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-33320-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Dielectric loss of SrTiO3 plotted against temperature from zero applied pressure (topmost, blue) to 15.7 kbar (bottom, red) and with data taken at zero applied pressure after removing all the load in the cell shown in dashed black. The peak at 10 K has been drastically suppressed by even the lowest pressure applied and the act of pressurising the cell has permanently removed the feature at 16 K. Inset shows detail of the two pressure sweeps where a broad maximum around 30 K is most clearly seen.
Figure 2Detail of the 10 K peak in the loss of SrTiO3 for pressures from 2.4 (topmost, blue) to 15.7 kbar (bottom, red) - the ambient pressure peak is too large for ease of comparison.
Figure 3Detail of the 70 K peak in the loss of SrTiO3 for pressures from 2.4 kbar (topmost, blue) to 15.7 kbar (bottom, red), normalised over the range shown for ease of comparison. Inset shows the peak temperature position (red crosses) shifting linearly up with pressure with slope 0.60 Kkbar−1 and the peak height (blue circles) decreasing linearly with pressure.
Figure 4Temperature and inverse peak height (inset) of the 10 K peak in the dielectric loss of SrTiO3 plotted against pressure.
Figure 5Loss of SrTiO3 down to 200 mK at 18.6 kbar (bottom, blue) and 20.0 kbar (upper, red). Inset shows an effective resistivity extracted from these data as described in the text, with dotted lines showing a fit to a 3D variable-range-hopping expression. Besides the prominent features at 10 K, the background loss follows this trend closely over more than two decades of temperature.