2 research outputs found
Anharmonic Strong-Coupling Effects at the Origin of the Charge Density Wave in CsVSb
The formation of charge density waves (CDW) is a long-standing open problem
particularly in dimensions higher than one. Various observations in the
vanadium antimonides discovered recently, such as the missing Kohn anomaly in
the acoustic phonons or the latent heat at the transition = 95 K
, further underpin this notion. Here, we study the Kagome metal CsVSb
using polarized inelastic light scattering. The electronic energy gap
as derived from the redistribution of the continuum is much larger than
expected from mean-field theory and reaches values above 20 for . The A phonon has a discontinuity at and a
precursor starting 20 K above . Density functional theory
qualitatively reproduces the redistribution of the electronic continuum at the
CDW transition and the phonon energies of the pristine and distorted
structures. The linewidths of all A and E phonon lines including
those emerging below were analyzed in terms of anharmonic
symmetric decay revealing strong phonon-phonon coupling. In addition, we
observe two CDW amplitude modes (AMs): one in A symmetry and one in
E symmetry. The temperature dependence of both modes deviates from the
prediction of mean-field theory. The A AM displays an asymmetric
Fano-type lineshape, suggestive of strong electron-phonon coupling. The
asymmetric A AM, along with the discontinuity of the A phonon,
the large phonon-phonon coupling parameters and the large gap ratio, indicate
the importance of anharmonic strong phonon-phonon and electron-phonon coupling
for the CDW formation in CsVSb.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure