Assessing Broken Inversion Symmetry in Conductive Materials

ORAL

Abstract

The coexistence of broken inversion symmetry and metallic conductivity represents a pathway to novel physics and useful properties, but the mechanisms which unite these properties remain largely unexplored. The recent discovery and synthesis of LiOsO3 [Shi et al., Nat. Mater. 12 (11) 1024-1027 (2013)] provides an opportunity to study noncentrosymmetric conductors in greater detail. Here we compare the lattice dynamical properties of the polar metal LiOsO3 with the degenerately doped ferroelectric BaTiO3 . We use density functional theory to investigate the interatomic force constants of both materials, providing insight into the driving forces behind the inversion symmetry-breaking structural transition. This information is coupled with the electronic and phononic structure to understand changes in off-centering driven by doping as opposed to intrinsic metallicity.

*This work is supported by the Army Research Office through Grant No. W911NF-15-1-0017.

Presenters

  • Daniel Hickox-Young

    • Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University

Authors

  • Daniel Hickox-Young

    • Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University
  • James Rondinelli

    • Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University
    • Northwestern Univ
    • Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern Univ
    • Northwestern University
    • Material Science and Engineering , Northwestern Univ
    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University
    • Northwestern University, Evanston, USA