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3,155
result(s) for
"May, A. F."
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Incommensurate Transverse Peierls Transition and Signature of Chiral Charge Density Wave in EuAl4
2025
In one-dimensional quantum materials, electrons and lattices can undergo a Peierls transition, a translational symmetry-breaking instability traditionally understood through electron coupling to longitudinal acoustic phonons. Recently, this paradigm has been revised in topological semimetals, where transverse acoustic phonons couple to
p
-orbital electrons, giving rise to a transverse Peierls transition. Importantly, transverse Peierls transition-induced distortions can further break mirror or inversion symmetries, producing nematic or chiral charge density waves. Here, we report the experimental identification of an incommensurate transverse Peierls transition in EuAl
4
. Using meV-resolution inelastic x-ray scattering, we observe complete softening of a transverse acoustic phonon upon cooling, while the longitudinal acoustic mode remains unaffected. First-principles calculations reveal that the transverse Peierls transition wavevector coincides with a charge susceptibility peak connecting nested Dirac bands. Second harmonic generation confirms mirror symmetry breaking, supporting a chiral charge density wave stabilized by the transverse Peierls transition.
A transverse Peierls transition can occur when transverse acoustic phonons couple with conducting p-orbital electrons. Here, the authors observe an incommensurate transverse Peierls transition and signatures of a chiral charge density wave in EuAl
4
.
Journal Article
Extended anharmonic collapse of phonon dispersions in SnS and SnSe
2020
The lattice dynamics and high-temperature structural transition in SnS and SnSe are investigated via inelastic neutron scattering, high-resolution Raman spectroscopy and anharmonic first-principles simulations. We uncover a spectacular, extreme softening and reconstruction of an entire manifold of low-energy acoustic and optic branches across a structural transition, reflecting strong directionality in bonding strength and anharmonicity. Further, our results solve a prior controversy by revealing the soft-mode mechanism of the phase transition that impacts thermal transport and thermoelectric efficiency. Our simulations of anharmonic phonon renormalization go beyond low-order perturbation theory and capture these striking effects, showing that the large phonon shifts directly affect the thermal conductivity by altering both the phonon scattering phase space and the group velocities. These results provide a detailed microscopic understanding of phase stability and thermal transport in technologically important materials, providing further insights on ways to control phonon propagation in thermoelectrics, photovoltaics, and other materials requiring thermal management.
Thermoelectric efficiency of SnS and SnSe is reported to peak around the phase transition temperature around 800 K; however, the transition mechanism and origin of ultralow thermal conductivity remain unclear. Here, the authors reveal the soft-mode mechanism of the phase transition that impacts thermal transport and thermoelectric efficiency.
Journal Article
Van Hove singularity in the magnon spectrum of the antiferromagnetic quantum honeycomb lattice
by
Podlesnyak, A.
,
Laurell, Pontus
,
Ehlers, G.
in
639/766/119/997
,
639/766/119/999
,
Antiferromagnetism
2021
In quantum magnets, magnetic moments fluctuate heavily and are strongly entangled with each other, a fundamental distinction from classical magnetism. Here, with inelastic neutron scattering measurements, we probe the spin correlations of the honeycomb lattice quantum magnet YbCl
3
. A linear spin wave theory with a single Heisenberg interaction on the honeycomb lattice, including both transverse and longitudinal channels of the neutron response, reproduces all of the key features in the spectrum. In particular, we identify a Van Hove singularity, a clearly observable sharp feature within a continuum response. The demonstration of such a Van Hove singularity in a two-magnon continuum is important as a confirmation of broadly held notions of continua in quantum magnetism and additionally because analogous features in two-spinon continua could be used to distinguish quantum spin liquids from merely disordered systems. These results establish YbCl
3
as a benchmark material for quantum magnetism on the honeycomb lattice.
Honeycomb lattices with interacting spins can host rich magnetic behaviour; however, typically features are complicated by additional interactions. Here, the authors perform neutron scattering on YbCl
3
, which exhibits near perfect two-dimensional magnetism, providing a benchmark for other materials.
Journal Article
Intrinsic anharmonic localization in thermoelectric PbSe
by
Minnich, A. J.
,
Manley, M. E.
,
Hellman, O.
in
639/301/299/2736
,
639/766/530/2803
,
Acoustic propagation
2019
Lead chalcogenides have exceptional thermoelectric properties and intriguing anharmonic lattice dynamics underlying their low thermal conductivities. An ideal material for thermoelectric efficiency is the phonon glass–electron crystal, which drives research on strategies to scatter or localize phonons while minimally disrupting electronic-transport. Anharmonicity can potentially do both, even in perfect crystals, and simulations suggest that PbSe is anharmonic enough to support intrinsic localized modes that halt transport. Here, we experimentally observe high-temperature localization in PbSe using neutron scattering but find that localization is not limited to isolated modes – zero group velocity develops for a significant section of the transverse optic phonon on heating above a transition in the anharmonic dynamics. Arrest of the optic phonon propagation coincides with unusual sharpening of the longitudinal acoustic mode due to a loss of phase space for scattering. Our study shows how nonlinear physics beyond conventional anharmonic perturbations can fundamentally alter vibrational transport properties.
To optimize the performance of lead chalcogenides for thermoelectric applications, strategies to further reduce the crystal’s thermal conductivity is required. Here, the authors discover anharmonic localized vibrations in PbSe crystals for optimizing the crystal’s vibrational transport properties.
Journal Article
The origin of incipient ferroelectricity in lead telluride
by
Hoffmann, M. C.
,
Savić, I.
,
Chollet, M.
in
639/301/119/2795
,
639/301/119/995
,
639/301/119/996
2016
The interactions between electrons and lattice vibrations are fundamental to materials behaviour. In the case of group IV–VI, V and related materials, these interactions are strong, and the materials exist near electronic and structural phase transitions. The prototypical example is PbTe whose incipient ferroelectric behaviour has been recently associated with large phonon anharmonicity and thermoelectricity. Here we show that it is primarily electron-phonon coupling involving electron states near the band edges that leads to the ferroelectric instability in PbTe. Using a combination of nonequilibrium lattice dynamics measurements and first principles calculations, we find that photoexcitation reduces the Peierls-like electronic instability and reinforces the paraelectric state. This weakens the long-range forces along the cubic direction tied to resonant bonding and low lattice thermal conductivity. Our results demonstrate how free-electron-laser-based ultrafast X-ray scattering can be utilized to shed light on the microscopic mechanisms that determine materials properties.
Group IV–VI materials often exist in a state near an electronic or structural phase transition. Here, the authors use ultrafast X-ray scattering to show that coupling of band-edge electrons and phonons causes the ferroelectric instability observed in lead telluride.
Journal Article
Orbitally driven giant phonon anharmonicity in SnSe
2015
Understanding elementary excitations and their couplings in condensed matter systems is critical for developing better energy-conversion devices. In thermoelectric materials, the heat-to-electricity conversion efficiency is directly improved by suppressing the propagation of phonon quasiparticles responsible for macroscopic thermal transport. The current record material for thermoelectric conversion efficiency, SnSe, has an ultralow thermal conductivity, but the mechanism behind the strong phonon scattering remains largely unknown. From inelastic neutron scattering measurements and first-principles simulations, we mapped the four-dimensional phonon dispersion surfaces of SnSe, and found the origin of the ionic-potential anharmonicity responsible for the unique properties of SnSe. We show that the giant phonon scattering arises from an unstable electronic structure, with orbital interactions leading to a ferroelectric-like lattice instability. The present results provide a microscopic picture connecting electronic structure and phonon anharmonicity in SnSe, and offers new insights on how electron–phonon and phonon–phonon interactions may lead to the realization of ultralow thermal conductivity.
Tin selenide is at present the best thermoelectric conversion material. Neutron scattering results and
ab initio
simulations show that the large phonon scattering is due to the development of a lattice instability driven by orbital interactions.
Journal Article
Magnetic excitations and absence of charge order in the van der Waals ferromagnet Fe4.75GeTe2
by
Bisogni, V.
,
Nelson, C.
,
Freeland, J. W.
in
639/766/119/2793
,
639/766/119/997
,
Condensed Matter Physics
2025
Understanding the ground state of van der Waals (vdW) magnets is crucial for designing devices leveraging these platforms. Here, we investigate the magnetic excitations and charge order in Fe
4.75
GeTe
2
, a vdW ferromagnet with ≈ 315 K Curie temperature. Using Fe
L
3
-edge resonant inelastic X-ray scattering, we observe a dual nature of magnetic excitations, comprising a coherent magnon and a broad non-dispersive continuum extending up to 150 meV, 50% higher than in Fe
2.72
GeTe
2
. The continuum intensity is sinusoidally modulated along the stacking direction
L
, with a period matching the inter-slab distance. Our results indicate that while the dual character of the magnetic excitations is generic to Fe-Ge-Te vdW magnets, Fe
4.75
GeTe
2
exhibits a longer out-of-plane magnetic correlation length, suggesting enhanced 3D magnetic character. Furthermore, resonant X-ray diffraction reveals that previously reported ±(1/3, 1/3,
L
) peaks originate from crystal structure rather than from charge order.
Journal Article
Observation of photo-induced plasmon–phonon coupling in PbTe via ultrafast x-ray scattering
2022
We report the observation of photo-induced plasmon–phonon coupled modes in the group IV–VI semiconductor PbTe using ultrafast x-ray diffuse scattering at the Linac Coherent Light Source. We measure the near-zone-center excited-state dispersion of the heavily screened longitudinal optical (LO) phonon branch as extracted from differential changes in x-ray diffuse scattering intensity following above bandgap photoexcitation. We suggest that upon photoexcitation, the LO phonon-plasmon coupled (LOPC) modes themselves become coupled to longitudinal acoustic modes that drive electron band shifts via acoustic deformation potentials and possibly to low-energy single-particle excitations within the plasma and that these couplings give rise to displacement-correlations that oscillate in time with a period given effectively by the heavily screened LOPC frequency.
Journal Article
Giant anharmonic phonon scattering in PbTe
2011
Understanding the microscopic processes affecting the bulk thermal conductivity is crucial to develop more efficient thermoelectric materials. PbTe is currently one of the leading thermoelectric materials, largely thanks to its low thermal conductivity. However, the origin of this low thermal conductivity in a simple rocksalt structure has so far been elusive. Using a combination of inelastic neutron scattering measurements and first-principles computations of the phonons, we identify a strong anharmonic coupling between the ferroelectric transverse optic mode and the longitudinal acoustic modes in PbTe. This interaction extends over a large portion of reciprocal space, and directly affects the heat-carrying longitudinal acoustic phonons. The longitudinal acoustic–transverse optic anharmonic coupling is likely to play a central role in explaining the low thermal conductivity of PbTe. The present results provide a microscopic picture of why many good thermoelectric materials are found near a lattice instability of the ferroelectric type.
Neutron scattering and first-principles calculations show that the small thermal conductivity of PbTe is due to anharmonic coupling between the acoustic phonon modes and the optical ferroelectric ones. The results provide a microscopic picture of why many good thermoelectrics are found near a ferroelectric lattice instability.
Journal Article
Vibrational autodetachment from hot copper dimer anions: breakdown of the Born-Oppenheimer approximation
by
Anderson, E K
,
Schmidt-May, A F
,
Kaminska, M
in
Anions
,
Born-Oppenheimer approximation
,
Copper
2020
Synopsis The decay of hot copper dimer anions is studied in a cryogenic storage ring. We detect atomic anion and neutral products and determine the fragmentation and vibrational autodetachment (VAD) rates separately. For short storage times the dimer anions predominantly decay by fragmentation of highly rotationally excited ions by tunneling through the rotational barrier. For storage times exceeding 100 ms, however, VAD is dominating. This process is driven by the very weak direct coupling between nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom.
Journal Article