42 research outputs found
Neutron Laue and X-ray diffraction study of a new crystallographic superspace phase in n-nonadecane-urea
International audienceAperiodic composite crystals present long-range order without translational symmetry. These materials may be described as the intersection in three dimensions of a crystal which is periodic in a higher-dimensional space. In such materials, symmetry breaking must be described as structural changes within these crystallographic superspaces. The increase in the number of superspace groups with the increase in the dimension of the superspace allows many more structural solutions. This is illustrated in n-nonadecane-urea, revealing a fifth higher-dimensional phase at low temperature
Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Extended Peierls-Hubbard Model with a Pulse of Oscillating Electric Field: I. Threshold Behavior in Ionic-to-Neutral Transition
Photoinduced dynamics of charge density and lattice displacements is
calculated by solving the time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation for a
one-dimensional extended Peierls-Hubbard model with alternating potentials for
the mixed-stack organic charge-transfer complex, TTF-CA. A pulse of oscillating
electric field is incorporated into the Peierls phase of the transfer integral.
The frequency, the amplitude, and the duration of the pulse are varied to study
the nonlinear and cooperative character of the photoinduced transition. When
the dimerized ionic phase is photoexcited, the threshold behavior is clearly
observed by plotting the final ionicity as a function of the increment of the
total energy. Above the threshold photoexcitation, the electronic state reaches
the neutral one with equidistant molecules after the electric field is turned
off. The transition is initiated by nucleation of a metastable neutral domain,
for which an electric field with frequency below the linear absorption peak is
more effective than that at the peak. When the pulse is strong and short, the
charge transfer takes place on the same time scale with the disappearance of
dimerization. As the pulse becomes weak and long, the dimerization-induced
polarization is disordered to restore the inversion symmetry on average before
the charge transfer takes place to bring the system neutral. Thus, a
paraelectric ionic phase is transiently realized by a weak electric field. It
is shown that infrared light also induces the ionic-to-neutral transition,
which is characterized by the threshold behavior.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figure
Neutral-ionic phase transition : a thorough ab-initio study of TTF-CA
The prototype compound for the neutral-ionic phase transition, namely TTF-CA,
is theoretically investigated by first-principles density functional theory
calculations. The study is based on three neutron diffraction structures
collected at 40, 90 and 300 K (Le Cointe et al., Phys. Rev. B 51, 3374 (1995)).
By means of a topological analysis of the total charge densities, we provide a
very precise picture of intra and inter-chain interactions. Moreover, our
calculations reveal that the thermal lattice contraction reduces the indirect
band gap of this organic semi-conductor in the neutral phase, and nearly closes
it in the vicinity of the transition temperature. A possible mechanism of the
neutral-ionic phase transition is discussed. The charge transfer from TTF to CA
is also derived by using three different technics.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, 7 table
Electronic and Lattice Dynamics in The Photoinduced Ionic-to-Neutral Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Extended Peierls-Hubbard Model
Real-time dynamics of charge density and lattice displacements is studied
during photoinduced ionic-to-neutral phase transitions by using a
one-dimensional extended Peierls-Hubbard model with alternating potentials for
the one-dimensional mixed-stack charge-transfer complex, TTF-CA. The
time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation and the classical equation of motion are
solved for the electronic and lattice parts, respectively. We show how neutral
domains grow in the ionic background. As the photoexcitation becomes intense,
more neutral domains are created. Above threshold intensity, the neutral phase
is finally achieved. After the photoexcitation, ionic domains with wrong
polarization also appear. They quickly reduce the averaged staggered lattice
displacement, compared with the averaged ionicity. As the degree of initial
lattice disorder increases, more solitons appear between these ionic domains
with different polarizations, which obstruct the growth of neutral domains and
slow down the transition.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Multiple Coulomb phase in the fluoride pyrochlore CsNiCrF6
The Coulomb phase is an idealized state of matter whose properties are determined by factors beyond conventional considerations of symmetry, including global topology, conservation laws and emergent order. Theoretically, Coulomb phases occur in ice-type systems such as water ice and spin ice; in dimer models; and in certain spin liquids. However, apart from ice-type systems, more general experimental examples are very scarce. Here we study the partly disordered material CsNiCrF6 and show that this material is a multiple Coulomb phase with signature correlations in three degrees of freedom: charge configurations, atom displacements and spin configurations. We use neutron and X-ray scattering to separate these correlations and to determine the magnetic excitation spectrum. Our results show how the structural and magnetic properties of apparently disordered materials may inherit, and be dictated by, a hidden symmetryâthe local gauge symmetry of an underlying Coulomb phase
Physics of Neutral-to-Ionic Phase Transition in Organic Charge Transfer Semiconducting Compounds
An uncommon excitonic instability takes place in some exotic semiconducting compounds. Indeed, the equilibrium neutral-to-ionic (N-I) phase transition, as well as the non-equilibrium photo-induced phase transformation, observed in some organic charge-transfer complexes, originate from intra- and inter-chain cooperative effects between structurally relaxed charge-transfer excitations. This electronic-structural phase transition manifests itself by a change of the degree of charge-transfer and a dimerization distortion with the formation of donor-acceptor pairs along the stacking axis in the I phase. Thermal charge-transfer excitations associated with the formation of I strings along N chains are at the heart of the mechanism of this phase transition. These relaxed electronic excitations, which are an intrinsic feature of low-dimensional systems with strong electron-phonon coupling, can be described in terms of self-trapping and self-multiplication of charge-transfer excitons. Precise structural studies on the prototype compound, tetrathiafulvalene-p-chloranil allow to highlight the respective role taken by the ionicity and the dimerization. Symmetry and thermodynamics analysis of the N-I transition, based on recent determination of the pressure-temperature phase diagram, make possible to present a consistent picture of this phase transition. Supported by theoretical considerations taking into account the interplay between quantum and thermal effects, the experimental observations show that the N-I transition results from the condensation and the ordering (crystallization) of charge-transfer excitations, following a phase diagram analogous to the solid-liquid-gas one
Phase and amplitude mode in the n=4 incommensurate phase II of biphenyl: neutron scattering experiments and theoretical results
International audienc
Laue diffraction: The key to neutron crystallography from submillimetric-volume single crystals
For several decades, chemists and physicists have been fascinated by
molecular compounds rich in delocalized electrons. In the solid
state these compounds may offer a very rich fan of properties:
optical, conduction and dielectric, magnetic Each state is
the result of a delicate balance amongst intra- and/or
intermolecular interactions which can be controlled, not just by
direct chemical substitution, but also by external parameters such
as temperature, pressure, continuous electric or magnetic fields, or
by light. The recent evolution of this field of science towards more
and more sophisticated materials makes also more and more difficult
their crystal growth. While neutron scattering is an extremely
powerful technique to get precise structural information, it is also
often disregarded in this field because usually large single
crystals are required. With the recent renaissance of Laue
techniques using the very intense flux provided by the reactor of
the Institut Laue-Langevin (ILL), accurate structural and/or
magnetic information can be now extracted routinely from molecular
crystals of volume 0.1 mm or smaller, with easy possibilities
of high pressure (up to 3 GPa) down to 0.2 K. A general survey of
these new possibilities is illustrated by an example taken from the
field of low-dimensional organic complexes