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Emergent Atomistic Polarization Textures in Quasi-1D Hexagonal Chalcogenides

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

The realization of topological defects such as vortices and skyrmions in magnetic and dipolar systems has allowed us to test their stability and dynamics at the microscopic limit, and also reimagine electronic and photonic functionalities in “ferroic” materials. In the case of vortex-antivortex structures, both magnetic and dipolar systems rely on boundary condition engineering and hence, their stability is dictated by narrow geometric conditions in nanoscale structures. In this talk, I will report the existence of atomic-scale vortex-antivortex dipolar structures in a quasi-1D hexagonal chalcogenide, BaTiS3 from the refined structures of X-ray synchrotron single crystal diffraction studies. BaTiS3 undergoes a series of electronic transitions from a room temperature ferrielectric phase to a vortex phase with the vortex-antivortex dipolar structures below ~250 K through a second order phase transition, and then, transforms into a lower symmetry phase below 180 K. In the vortex phase, we observe large displacements of Ti in the TiS6 octahedra of BaTiS3, comparable to ferroelectric perovskite oxides, along c-axis and in a-b plane suggesting the robustness of the polar textures. Electrical transport studies show that these phase transitions are sensitive to strain, and hence, one can infer the tunability of the electronic properties of the vortex phase. We presume the role of multipole interactions as the origin of these emergent polarization textures and note similarities in structure and electrical characteristics with charge density wave materials such as 1T-TiSe2 and Ta2NiSe5. Our work setups up complex charge density waves with d0 filling as a playground for realizing and understanding quantum polarization topologies.

Publication: 1. H. Chen et al. arXiv:2207.11622 (2022).<br>2. B. Zhao et al. in preparation.

Presenters

  • Jayakanth Ravichandran

    University of Southern California

Authors

  • Jayakanth Ravichandran

    University of Southern California