Polar structural modulation in proximity to Peierls distortion in CoIn<sub>2</sub>
ORAL
Abstract
The presence of a disordered, short-range ordered, or modulated crystal structure separating a high-symmetry, high temperature phase from a low temperature ground state can lead to a host of interesting and technologically relevant properties including large Berry curvature, ultrahigh thermoelectric efficiency, and ferroelectricity. In CoIn2, linear chains of equidistant Co atoms in the ambient temperature structure distort via pairwise Peierls dislocation, likely at temperature T1 = 194 +/- 1 K. Signatures in heat capacity, electrical resistivity, magnetization, and single crystal x-ray diffraction measurements, however, reveal that a polar, non-centrosymmetric, structurally modulated phase separates the undistorted and Peierls phases over a narrow range between T1 and T2 = 206 +/- 2 K. Here, impending disorder is resolved by the formation of a structural modulation with propagation vector q = (0,d,0), d = 0.23 +/- 0.02 oriented in a direction perpendicular to the Co-Co chains. Moreover, we observe enhancement in heat capacity and magnetization across a broad temperature range from 140 K to 210 K, which extends deep into the Peierls ground state. These results suggest that the structural modulation may be the signature of a charge density wave (CDW), which overlaps and coexists with the Peierls phase.
–
Publication: A. Sabovic, S. Villanova, A. Portillo, Y. Li, Y. Janssen, B. O. Patrick, M. C. Aronson, and J. W. Simonson, ``Intermediate temperature structural modulation and properties of CoIn$_2$'', submitted to Phys. Rev. Mater. 2024
Presenters
-
Jack W Simonson
State Univ of NY - Farmingdale
Authors
-
Jack W Simonson
State Univ of NY - Farmingdale
-
Alan Sabovic
Farmingdale State College
-
Saija Villanova
Farmingdale State College
-
Alex Portillo
Farmingdale State College
-
Yaping Li
Farmingdale State College
-
Yuri Janssen
State Univ of NY - Farmingdale
-
Brian Patrick
University of British Columbia
-
Meigan Aronson
University of British Columbia