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A large modulation of electron-phonon coupling and an emergent superconducting dome in doped strong ferroelectrics

ORAL

Abstract

We use first-principles methods to study doped strong ferroelectrics (taking BaTiO3 as a prototype). Contrary to Anderson/Blount’s weakly coupled electron mechanism for “ferroelectric-like metals”, we find a strong coupling between itinerant electrons and soft polar phonons in doped BaTiO3. As a consequence, across a polar-to-centrosymmetric phase transition in doped BaTiO3, the total electron-phonon coupling is increased to about 0.6 around the critical concentration, which is sufficient to induce phonon-mediated superconductivity of about 2 K. Lowering the crystal symmetry of doped BaTiO3 by imposing epitaxial strain can further increase the superconducting temperature via a sizable coupling between itinerant electrons and acoustic phonons. Our work demonstrates a viable approach to modulating electron-phonon coupling and inducing phonon-mediated superconductivity in doped strong ferroelectrics and potentially in polar metals. Our results also show that the weakly coupled electron mechanism for “ferroelectric-like metals” is not necessarily present in doped strong ferroelectrics.

Presenters

  • Jiaji Ma

    NYU-ECNU Institute of Physics, NYU Shanghai, New York University Shanghai

Authors

  • Jiaji Ma

    NYU-ECNU Institute of Physics, NYU Shanghai, New York University Shanghai

  • Ruihan Yang

    Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Science, University of California Irvine

  • Hanghui Chen

    NYU-ECNU Institute of Physics, NYU Shanghai, Department of Physics, New York University, NYU Shanghai, New York University Shanghai, NYU-ECNU Institute of Physics, New York University Shanghai