Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Interplay between antiferrodistortive, ferroelectric and superconducting instabilities in Sr_{1-x}Ca_{x}$TiO_{3-δ}

Published 27 Oct 2014 in cond-mat.str-el | (1410.7366v1)

Abstract: SrTiO${3}$ undergoes a cubic-to-tetragonal phase transition at 105K. This antiferrodistortive transition is believed to be in competition with incipient ferroelectricity. Substituting strontium by isovalent calcium induces a ferroelectric order. Introducing mobile electrons to the system by chemical non-isovalent doping, on the other hand, leads to the emergence of a dilute metal with a superconducting ground state. The link between superconductivity and the other two instabilities is an open question, which gathers momentum in the context of the growing popularity of the paradigm linking unconventional superconductors and quantum critical points. We present a set of specific-heat, neutron-scattering and dielectric permittivity and polarization measurements on Sr${1-x}$Ca${x}$TiO${3}$ ($0<x<0.009$) and a low-temperature electric conductivity in Sr${0.9978}$Ca${0.0022}$TiO${3-\delta}$. Calcium substitution was found to enhance the transition temperature for both anti-ferrodistortive and ferroelectric transitions. Moreover, we find that Sr${0.9978}$Ca${0.0022}$TiO${3-\delta}$ has a superconducting ground state. The critical temperature in this rare case of a superconductor with a ferroelectric parent, is slightly lower than in SrTiO${3-\delta}$ of comparable carrier concentration. A three-dimensional phase diagram for Sr${1-x}$Ca${x}$TiO${3-\delta}$ tracking the three transition temperatures as a function of x and $\delta$ results from this study, in which ferroelectric and superconducting ground states are not immediate neighbours.

Summary

Paper to Video (Beta)

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.