Abstract
In contrast to polar cation displacements driving oxides into
noncentrosymmetric and ferroelectric states, inversion‐preserving anion
displacements, such as rotations or tilts of oxygen octahedra about
cation coordination centers, are exceedingly common. More than one
nonpolar rotational mode in layered perovskites can lift inversion
symmetry and combine to induce an electric polarization through a hybrid
improper ferroelectric (HIF) mechanism. This form of ferroelectricity
expands the compositional palette to new ferroelectric oxides because
its activity derives from geometric rather than electronic origins.
Here, the new Ruddlesden–Popper HIF Sr3Zr2O7,
which is the first ternary lead‐free zirconate ferroelectric, is
reported and room‐temperature polarization switching is demonstrated.
This compound undergoes a first‐order ferroelectric‐to‐paraelectric
transition, involving an unusual change in the “sense” of octahedral
rotation while the octahedral tilt remains unchanged. Our experimental
and first‐principles study shows that the paraelectric polymorph
competes with the polar phase and emerges from a trilinear coupling of
rotation and tilt modes interacting with an antipolar mode. This form of
hybrid improper “antiferroelectricity” is recently predicted
theoretically but has remained undetected. This work establishes the
importance of understanding anharmonic interactions among lattice
degrees of freedom, which is important for the discovery of new
ferroelectrics and likely to influence the design of next‐generation
thermoelectrics.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 1801856 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | Advanced Functional Materials |
Volume | 28 |
Issue number | 30 |
Early online date | 28 May 2018 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 23 Jul 2018 |
Keywords
- Antiferroelectrics
- Ferroelectrics
- Layered perovskites
- Oxygen octahedral rotations
- Tilts
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Alexandra Gibbs
- School of Chemistry - EPSRC Early Career Fellow
- Centre for Designer Quantum Materials
Person: Academic - Research