The Landau theory of phase transitions has been re-examined under the
framework of a modified mean field theory in ferroelectrics. By doing so, one
can see that there are two atomic movements involved in the ferroelectric phase
transition; the first corresponds to the vibration of crystalline lattice,
which will render phonon mode softening at the critical point, and the second
represents the slow evolution of a partially ordered nematic phase formed by
the cooperative behavior of high-temperature structure precursors. In this
hierarchical dynamic structure, the former fast dynamics could be significantly
modulated by the latter slow dynamics in the vicinity of the Curie temperature;
it then turns out that it is the behavior of the nematic phase on approaching
the critical point that makes the Landau theory deviate from experimental
observations.Comment: 7 pages and 3 figure