5 research outputs found
Centrosymmetric-noncentrosymmetric Structural Phase Transition in Quasi one-dimensional compound, (TaSe)I
(TaSe)I, a compound belonging to the family of quasi-one-dimensional
transition-metal tetrachalcogenides, has drawn significant attention due to a
recent report on possible coexistence of two antagonistic phenomena,
superconductivity and magnetism below 2.5~K (Bera et. al, arXiv:2111.14525).
Here, we report a structural phase transition of the trimerized phase at
temperature, ~145~K using Raman scattering, specific heat, and
electrical transport measurements. The temperature-dependent single-crystal
X-ray diffraction experiments establish the phase transition from a
high-temperature centrosymmetric to a low-temperature non-centrosymmetric
structure, belonging to the same tetragonal crystal family. The first-principle
calculation finds the aforementioned inversion symmetry-breaking structural
transition to be driven by the hybridization energy gain due to the off-centric
movement of the Ta atoms, which wins over the elastic energy loss.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, Under review as a regular articl
Enhanced coercivity and emergence of spin cluster glass state in 2D ferromagnetic material Fe3GeTe2
Two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals (vdW) magnetic materials with high
coercivity and high are desired for spintronics and memory storage
applications. FeGeTe (F3GT) is one such 2D vdW ferromagnet with a
reasonably high , but with a very low coercive field,
(100~Oe). Some of the common techniques of enhancing are
by introducing pinning centers, defects, stress, doping, etc. They involve the
risk of undesirable alteration of other important magnetic properties. Here we
propose a very easy, robust, and highly effective method of phase engineering
by altering the sample growth conditions to greatly enhance the intrinsic
coercivity (7-10 times) of the sample, without compromising its fundamental
magnetic properties (210K). The phase-engineered sample
(F3GT-2) comprises of parent F3GT phase with a small percentage of randomly
embedded clusters of a coplanar FeTe (FT) phase. The FT phase serves as both
mosaic pinning centers between grains of F3GT above its antiferromagnetic
transition temperature (70~K) and also as anti-phase domains
below . As a result, the grain boundary disorder and metastable
nature are greatly augmented, leading to highly enhanced coercivity, cluster
spin glass, and meta-magnetic behavior. The enhanced coercivity (1~kOe)
makes F3GT-2 much more useful for memory storage applications and is likely to
elucidate a new route to tune useful magnetic properties. Moreover, this method
is much more convenient than hetero-structure and other cumbersome techniques.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
Raman signatures of lattice dynamics across inversion symmetry breaking phase transition in quasi-1D compound, (TaSe)I
Structural phase transition can occur due to complex mechanisms other than
simple dynamical instability, especially when the parent and daughter structure
is of low dimension. This article reports such an inversion symmetry-breaking
structural phase transition in a quasi-1D compound (TaSe)I at T
141~K studied by Raman spectroscopy. Our investigation of collective lattice
dynamics reveals three additional Raman active modes in the low-temperature
non-centrosymmetric structure. Two vibrational modes become Raman active due to
the absence of an inversion center, while the third mode is a soft phonon mode
resulting from the vibration of Ta atoms along the \{-Ta-Ta-\} chains.
Furthermore, the most intense Raman mode display Fano-shaped asymmetry,
inferred as the signature of strong electron-phonon coupling. The group theory
and symmetry analysis of Raman spectra confirm the displacive-first-order
nature of the structural transition. Therefore, our results establish
(TaSeI as a model system with broken inversion symmetry and strong
electron-phonon coupling in the quasi-1D regime.Comment: Main text - 6 figures, 11 pages, supplementary - 10 figures, 13 page
Review of recent progress on THz spectroscopy of quantum materials: superconductors, magnetic and topological materials
Recently, the THz spectroscopy has been efficiently used to investigate varieties of quantum materials, including superconductors, novel magnetic, and topological materials. These materials often exhibit strong correlation and competing interactions between various degrees of freedom, including charge, spins, orbital, and lattice dynamics, which lead to many exotic phenomena and novel phase transitions whose cause–effect correlations are challenging to determine. Whereas probing the ground state’s excitations can unravel the underlying mechanism of these complex phenomena. The characteristic energy scales of different elementary excitations and collective modes in many of these materials are in the THz frequency range. Therefore, THz spectroscopy has become a very effective probe and directly revealed many exciting physics. Many novel phenomena, including exotic quasiparticle excitations in magnetic systems, topological magneto-electric effect, and topological quantum phase transition in three-dimensional topological insulators, are studied with unprecedented success. Here, we review some recent research reports on many-body quantum materials, including superconductors, novel magnetic, and topological materials probed by few popular THz-spectroscopy techniques. We will also briefly discuss the prospects of using THz spectroscopy for observing some exotic quantum phenomena that are still elusive or under investigation