12 research outputs found
Endotaxial Stabilization of 2D Charge Density Waves with Long-range Order
Charge density waves are emergent quantum states that spontaneously reduce
crystal symmetry, drive metal-insulator transitions, and precede
superconductivity. In low-dimensions, distinct quantum states arise, however,
thermal fluctuations and external disorder destroy long-range order. Here we
stabilize ordered two-dimensional (2D) charge density waves through endotaxial
synthesis of confined monolayers of 1T-TaS. Specifically, an ordered
incommensurate charge density wave (oIC-CDW) is realized in 2D with
dramatically enhanced amplitude and resistivity. By enhancing CDW order, the
hexatic nature of charge density waves becomes observable. Upon heating via
in-situ TEM, the CDW continuously melts in a reversible hexatic process wherein
topological defects form in the charge density wave. From these results, new
regimes of the CDW phase diagram for 1T-TaS are derived and consistent with
the predicted emergence of vestigial quantum order
Real-space imaging of polar and elastic nano-textures in thin films via inversion of diffraction data
Exploiting the emerging nanoscale periodicities in epitaxial, single-crystal
thin films is an exciting direction in quantum materials science: confinement
and periodic distortions induce novel properties. The structural motifs of
interest are ferroelastic, ferroelectric, multiferroic, and, more recently,
topologically protected magnetization and polarization textures. A critical
step towards heterostructure engineering is understanding their nanoscale
structure, best achieved through real-space imaging. X-ray Bragg coherent
diffractive imaging visualizes sub-picometer crystalline displacements with
tens of nanometers spatial resolution. Yet, it is limited to objects spatially
confined in all three dimensions and requires highly coherent, laser-like
x-rays. Here we lift the confinement restriction by developing real-space
imaging of periodic lattice distortions: we combine an iterative phase
retrieval algorithm with unsupervised machine learning to invert the diffuse
scattering in conventional x-ray reciprocal-space mapping into real-space
images of polar and elastic textures in thin epitaxial films. We first
demonstrate our imaging in PbTiO3/SrTiO3 superlattices to be consistent with
published phase-field model calculations. We then visualize strain-induced
ferroelastic domains emerging during the metal-insulator transition in Ca2RuO4
thin films. Instead of homogeneously transforming into a low-temperature
structure (like in bulk), the strained Mott insulator splits into nanodomains
with alternating lattice constants, as confirmed by cryogenic scanning
transmission electron microscopy. Our study reveals the type, size,
orientation, and crystal displacement field of the nano-textures. The
non-destructive imaging of textures promises to improve models for their
dynamics and enable advances in quantum materials and microelectronics
Nanoscale deformation mechanics reveal resilience in nacre of Pinna nobilis shell.
8 pagesInternational audienceThe combination of soft nanoscale organic components with inorganic nanograins hierarchically designed by natural organisms results in highly ductile structural materials that can withstand mechanical impact and exhibit high resilience on the macro- and nano-scale. Our investigation of nacre deformation reveals the underlying nanomechanics that govern the structural resilience and absorption of mechanical energy. Using high-resolution scanning/transmission electron microscopy (S/TEM) combined with in situ indentation, we observe nanoscale recovery of heavily deformed nacre that restores its mechanical strength on external stimuli up to 80% of its yield strength. Under compression, nacre undergoes deformation of nanograins and non-destructive locking across organic interfaces such that adjacent inorganic tablets structurally join. The locked tablets respond to strain as a continuous material, yet the organic boundaries between them still restrict crack propagation. Remarkably, the completely locked interface recovers its original morphology without any noticeable deformation after compressive contact stresses as large as 1.2âGPa
Endotaxial stabilization of 2D charge density waves with long-range order
Abstract Charge density waves are emergent quantum states that spontaneously reduce crystal symmetry, drive metal-insulator transitions, and precede superconductivity. In low-dimensions, distinct quantum states arise, however, thermal fluctuations and external disorder destroy long-range order. Here we stabilize ordered two-dimensional (2D) charge density waves through endotaxial synthesis of confined monolayers of 1T-TaS2. Specifically, an ordered incommensurate charge density wave (oIC-CDW) is realized in 2D with dramatically enhanced amplitude and resistivity. By enhancing CDW order, the hexatic nature of charge density waves becomes observable. Upon heating via in-situ TEM, the CDW continuously melts in a reversible hexatic process wherein topological defects form in the charge density wave. From these results, new regimes of the CDW phase diagram for 1T-TaS2 are derived and consistent with the predicted emergence of vestigial quantum order
Two-dimensional charge order stabilized in clean polytype heterostructures
Strong evidence suggests that transformative correlated electron behavior may
exist only in unrealized clean-limit 2D materials such as 1T-TaS2.
Unfortunately, experiment and theory suggest that extrinsic disorder in free
standing 2D layers impedes correlation-driven quantum behavior. Here we
demonstrate a new route to realizing fragile 2D quantum states through
epitaxial polytype engineering of van der Waals materials. The isolation of
truly 2D charge density waves (CDWs) between metallic layers stabilizes
commensurate long-range order and lifts the coupling between neighboring CDW
layers to restore mirror symmetries via interlayer CDW twinning. The
twinned-commensurate charge density wave (tC-CDW) reported herein has a single
metal-insulator phase transition at ~350 K as measured structurally and
electronically. Fast in-situ transmission electron microscopy and scanned
nanobeam diffraction map the formation of tC-CDWs. This work introduces
epitaxial polytype engineering of van der Waals materials to access latent 2D
ground states distinct from conventional 2D fabrication