| Literature DB >> 32202901 |
Cosme Milesi-Brault1,2, Constance Toulouse2, Evan Constable3, Hugo Aramberri1, Virginie Simonet4, Sophie de Brion4, Helmuth Berger5, Luigi Paolasini6, Alexei Bosak6, Jorge Íñiguez1,2, Mael Guennou2.
Abstract
Model materials are precious test cases for elementary theories and provide building blocks for the understanding of more complex cases. Here, we describe the lattice dynamics of the structural phase transition in francisite Cu_{3}Bi(SeO_{3})_{2}O_{2}Cl at 115 K and show that it provides a rare archetype of a transition driven by a soft antipolar phonon mode. In the high-symmetry phase at high temperatures, the soft mode is found at (0,0,0.5) at the Brillouin zone boundary and is measured by inelastic x-ray scattering and thermal diffuse scattering. In the low-symmetry phase, this soft-mode is folded back onto the center of the Brillouin zone as a result of the doubling of the unit cell, and appears as a fully symmetric mode that can be tracked by Raman spectroscopy. On both sides of the transition, the mode energy squared follows a linear behavior over a large temperature range. First-principles calculations reveal that, surprisingly, the flat phonon band calculated for the high-symmetry phase seems incompatible with the displacive character found experimentally. We discuss this unusual behavior in the context of an ideal Kittel model of an antiferroelectric transition.Year: 2020 PMID: 32202901 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.124.097603
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161