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3D-ΔPDF analysis on the structural phase transitions in NaNO<sub>2</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

NaNO2 is a ferroelectric with a simple crystal structure that undergoes a phase transition from a ferroelectric body centered orthorhombic (Im2m) phase at room temperature to a paraelectric centrosymmetric orthorhombic (Immm) phase at T* = 436 K. There is an intermediate incommensurately modulated antiferroelectric phase in between ferroelectric and paraelectric phase for a very narrow temperature range of about 2 K at 434 K. The ferroelectric to paraelectric phase transition is modulated by the rearrangement of triangular NO2- and Na+ ions along the crystal b-axis. To probe the short-range order and local correlations behind the process of the proto-typical order-disorder phase transition of this system, x-ray diffuse scattering measurements performed on a single crystal of were transformed into real space producing a three-dimensional pair distribution function using the ‘punch and fill’ method. This 3D-ΔPDF analysis shows unambiguous evidence of temperature-independent local displacements of NO2- ions resulting in its polarization reversal below T*.

This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Sciences and Engineering Division.



Presenters

  • Puspa Upreti

    Northern Illinois University, Material Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory; Department of Physics, Northern Illinois University

Authors

  • Puspa Upreti

    Northern Illinois University, Material Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory; Department of Physics, Northern Illinois University

  • Matthew J Krogstad

    Argonne National Laboratory, Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Omar Chmaissem

    Material Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory; Department of Physics, Northern Illinois University, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Stephan Rosenkranz

    Argonne National Laboratory, Material Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Raymond Osborn

    Argonne National Laboratory, Material Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory