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Electronic structure and biaxial strain in RbHgF3 perovskite and hybrid improper ferroelectricity in (Na,Rb) Hg2 F6 and (K,Rb) Hg2 F6 superlattices

  • Los Alamos National Laboratory Materials Science and Technology Division
  • Computational Earth Science, Earth and Environmental Sciences Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Here we study geometry, electronic structure, and effects of biaxial strain on RbHgF3 fluoro-perovskite from first-principles based density-functional theory computations. It has been shown that while an epitaxial strain of ∼±2% is sufficient to produce a significant ferroelectric polarization in the prototypical cubic Pm3m structure, the ground state orthorhombic Pnma structure remains effectively immune to the strain induced ferroelectricity even at biaxial strains as high as ±5%. We further show that RbHgF3 in the Pnma structure can accommodate compressive and tensile strains, respectively, by a-a-b0 tilting (out-of-phase tilts along a and b axes) and a0a0b+ rotations (in-phase rotations along c axis) of HgF2 octahedra. Similar to many perovskite oxides, HgF2 octahedral rotations in RbHgF3 are found to be accompanied by large Rb-site antipolar displacements along the [001] direction. We demonstrate that this coupling between the octahedral rotations and Rb-site antipolar modes can be harnessed in RbHgF3/NaHgF3 and RbHgF3/KHgF3 superlattices to produce significant net polarizations of 4.93 μC/cm2 and 1.70 μC/cm2, respectively.

Original languageEnglish
Article number115121
JournalPhysical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics
Volume90
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 Sep 2014
Externally publishedYes

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