| Literature DB >> 30886403 |
V A Stoica1, N Laanait2, C Dai1, Z Hong1, Y Yuan1, Z Zhang3, S Lei1, M R McCarter4, A Yadav4, A R Damodaran4, S Das4, G A Stone1, J Karapetrova3, D A Walko3, X Zhang3, L W Martin4,5, R Ramesh4,5, L-Q Chen1, H Wen3, V Gopalan6, J W Freeland7.
Abstract
Stimulation with ultrafast light pulses can realize and manipulate states of matter with emergent structural, electronic and magnetic phenomena. However, these non-equilibrium phases are often transient and the challenge is to stabilize them as persistent states. Here, we show that atomic-scale PbTiO3/SrTiO3 superlattices, counterpoising strain and polarization states in alternate layers, are converted by sub-picosecond optical pulses to a supercrystal phase. This phase persists indefinitely under ambient conditions, has not been created via equilibrium routes, and can be erased by heating. X-ray scattering and microscopy show this unusual phase consists of a coherent three-dimensional structure with polar, strain and charge-ordering periodicities of up to 30 nm. By adjusting only dielectric properties, the phase-field model describes this emergent phase as a photo-induced charge-stabilized supercrystal formed from a two-phase equilibrium state. Our results demonstrate opportunities for light-activated pathways to thermally inaccessible and emergent metastable states.Year: 2019 PMID: 30886403 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-019-0311-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841