Emergent room temperature polar phase in CaTiO3 nanoparticles and single crystals
Abstract
Polar instabilities are well known to be suppressed on scaling materials down to the nanoscale, when the electrostatic energy increase at surfaces exceeds lowering of the bulk polarization energy. Surprisingly, here we report an emergent low symmetry polar phase arising in nanoscale powders of CaTiO3, the original mineral named perovskite discovered in 1839 and considered nominally nonpolar at any finite temperature in the bulk. Using nonlinear optics and spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and microscopy studies, we discover a well-defined polar to non-polar transition at a TC = 350 K in these powders. The same polar phase is also seen as a surface layer in bulk CaTiO3 single crystals, forming striking domains with in-plane polarization orientations. Density functional theory reveals that oxygen octahedral distortions in the surface layer lead to the stabilization of the observed monoclinic polar phase. These results reveal new ways of overcoming the scaling limits to polarization in perovskites. Show more
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https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000322329Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
APL MaterialsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
American Institute of PhysicsOrganisational unit
03903 - Spaldin, Nicola A. / Spaldin, Nicola A.
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