Nanoscale design routes to polar oxides

ORAL

Abstract

Many useful material properties, such as ferroelectricity, arise because of inversion symmetry breaking in a material's ground state. Understanding how to purposefully lift spacial parity operations is critical to engineering compounds with `acentric' properties. Using first-principles density functional calculations, we describe the crystal-chemistry criteria necessary to design artificial nanoscale oxides that display spontaneous polarizations using non-polar metal-oxygen polyhedra. By controlling the flavor of A-site cation ordering in AA$^\prime$B$_2$O$_6$ perovskites, we show that spontaneous electric polarizations comparable in magnitude to conventional ferroelectrics are attainable. We conclude by explaining how the criteria can be extended to other material classes to realize polar oxides by design.

Authors

  • Joshua Young

    Drexel University

  • James Rondinelli

    Drexel University, Dept of Materials Science and Engineering, Drexel University, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA 19104, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Drexel University