New route for understanding and tailoring the properties of ferroelectric materials
Electric polarization in the macroscopic world and electrons moving at atomic scales
Femtosecond
x-ray experiments in combination with a new theoretical approach establish a
direct connection between electric properties in the macroscopic world and
electron motions on the time and length scale of atoms. The results open a new
route for understanding and tailoring the properties of ferroelectric
materials.
Phenomena in
the macroscopic world are described by classical physics while processes at
atomic length and time scales are governed by the laws of quantum mechanics.
The connection between microscopic and macroscopic physical quantities is far
from being trivial and partly unexplained.
The electric
polarization is a macroscopic quantity which describes the dipole moment ofmatter. The polarization originates from the peculiar electron distribution at
the atomic scale in polar and ionic materials, among them the most interesting
class of ferroelectrics. Their spontaneous electric polarization is widely
applied in electronic sensors, memories, and switching devices. The link
between polarizations, in particular time dependent ones, and microscopic
electron densities is important for understanding and tailoring the properties
of ferroelectrics.
Based on a
new experimental and theoretical approach, scientists from the Max Born
Institute have now established a direct quantitative connection between
macroscopic electric polarizations and time-dependent microscopic electron
densities. As they report in Physical Review B, atomic motions in
ferroelectrics are launched by optical excitation and modulate the electron
distribution on a femtosecond time scale (1 fs = 10 -15 seconds). The resulting
dynamics of electron density are mapped by time-resolved x-ray powder diffraction.
Such data allow for the generation of temporally and spatially resolved
electron density maps from which the momentary macroscopic polarization is
derived with the help of a new theoretical concept. The potential of the method
is demonstrated with two prototype ferroelectric materials.
The
theoretical work extends the existing quantum phase approach for calculating
stationary macroscopic polarizations towards ultrafast nonequilibrium dynamics
of electron charge and polarization. The theoretical key steps consist in
deriving a microscopic current density from time-dependent electron density
maps while minimizing the electron kinetic energy, and calculating the
macroscopic polarization from the current density. This method is applied to
the prototype ferroelectric material ammonium sulfate [(NH4)2SO4]. As a second
prototype system, potassium dihydrogen phosphate [KH2PO4] was investigated. The
analysis provides macroscopic polarizations and their absolute values as
governed by microscopic vibrations.
The results
establish ultrafast x-ray diffraction as a unique tool for grasping macroscopic
electric properties of complex materials. The broad relevance of this new
insight is underlined by the selection of the article as an "Editor's
Suggestion".
Original
publication:
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