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Long-Range Elastic Fluctuations lead to the Emergence of Anisotropy In Thermoelectric GeTe

ORAL

Abstract

Peak performance in energy materials is associated with high symmetry and atomic fluctuations. Indeed cubic thermoelectrics, phase change memories, photovoltaics etc are often claimed to be highly disordered or 'intrinsically nanostructured'. In GeTe and related IV-VI compounds, this is said to provide the low thermal and high electronic conductivities needed for thermoelectric applications. However, a general theory linking these empirical observations to transport properties is lacking. From Kimber et al. [1], since conventional crystallography cannot distinguish between disorder and atomic motions, Kimber et al. showed that the atomic lattice of GeTe is nearly perfectly crystalline at all temperatures, but hosts remarkably large and anisotropic dynamics. Along the <111>_c direction, motion is almost uncorrelated, however, interactions are strengthened along the <100>c direction. Here, we show that this anisotropy naturally emerges from a Ginzburg-Landau model which couples polarization fluctuations through long-range elastic interactions. Coupling of the resultant ferroelectric large polarons to elastic anisotropy is likely ubiquitous in the IV-VI materials, ferroelectrics and photovoltaics, allowing strain engineering of novel optoelectronic properties.

[1] Simon A.J. Kimber, Jiayong Zhang, Charles H. Liang, Gian G. Guzmán-Verri, Peter B. Littlewood, Yongqiang Cheng, Douglas L. Abernathy, Jessica M. Hudspeth, Zhong-Zhen Luo, Mercouri G. Kanatzidis,Tapan Chatterji, Anibal J. Ramirez-Cuesta, and Simon J. L. Billinge, Dynamic crystallography reveals spontaneous anisotropy in thermoelectric GeTe, submitted, (2022). http://arxiv.org/abs/2202.05565

Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2202.05565

Presenters

  • Charles H Liang

    University of Chicago

Authors

  • Charles H Liang

    University of Chicago

  • Gian G Guzman-Verri

    Univ de Costa Rica

  • Peter Littlewood

    University of Chicago, University of Chicago, Argonne National Laboratory