Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2021
Volume 66, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 15–19, 2021; Virtual; Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA
Session Y55: Topological Phenomena and Ferroelectric Oxide Interfaces
11:30 AM–2:30 PM,
Friday, March 19, 2021
Sponsoring
Unit:
DMP
Chair: Guru Khalsa, Cornell University
Abstract: Y55.00005 : Optical creation of a supercrystal with nanoscale periodicity*
12:18 PM–12:54 PM
Live
Presenter:
Venkatraman Gopalan
(Pennsylvania State University)
Authors:
Venkatraman Gopalan
(Pennsylvania State University)
Vladimir A Stoica
(Pennsylvania State University)
Nouamane Laanait
(Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
cheng dai
(Pennsylvania State University)
zijian hong
(Pennsylvania State University)
yakun yuan
(University of California Los Angeles)
Lane Wyatt Martin
(materials science and engineering, university of california berkeley)
Ramamoorthy Ramesh
(materials science and engineering, university of california berkeley)
Long-Qing Chen
(Pennsylvania State University)
Haidan Wen
(argonne national laboratory)
John Freeland
(argonne national laboratory)
Stimulation with ultrafast light pulses can realize and manipulate states of matter with emergent structural, electronic and magnetic phenomena. However, these non-equilibrium phases are often transient and the challenge is to stabilize them as persistent states. Here, we show that atomic-scale PbTiO3/SrTiO3 superlattices, counterpoising strain and polarization states in alternate layers, are converted by sub-picosecond optical pulses to a supercrystal phase. This phase persists indefinitely under ambient conditions, has not been created via equilibrium routes, and can be erased by heating. X-ray scattering and microscopy show this unusual phase consists of a coherent three-dimensional structure with polar, strain and charge-ordering periodicities of up to 30 nm. By adjusting only dielectric properties, the phase-field model describes this emergent phase as a photo-induced charge-stabilized supercrystal formed from a two-phase equilibrium state. Progress on understanding the formation mechanism for creation of the supercrystal will be presented. Our results demonstrate opportunities for light- activated pathways to thermally inaccessible and emergent metastable states.
*This work was supported primarily by the Department of Energy grant number DE-SC0012375
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