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Normal Mode Determination of Perovskite Crystal Structures with Octahedral Rotations: Theory and Applications

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 Added by Jonathan Spanier
 Publication date 2012
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Nuclear site analysis methods are used to enumerate the normal modes of $ABX_{3}$ perovskite polymorphs with octahedral rotations. We provide the modes of the fourteen subgroups of the cubic aristotype describing the Glazer octahedral tilt patterns, which are obtained from rotations of the $BX_{6}$ octahedra with different sense and amplitude about high symmetry axes. We tabulate all normal modes of each tilt system and specify the contribution of each atomic species to the mode displacement pattern, elucidating the physical meaning of the symmetry unique modes. We have systematically generated 705 schematic atomic displacement patterns for the normal modes of all 15 (14 rotated + 1 unrotated) Glazer tilt systems. We show through some illustrative examples how to use these tables to identify the octahedral rotations, symmetric breathing, and first-order Jahn-Teller anti-symmetric breathing distortions of the $BX_{6}$ octahedra, and the associated Raman selection rules. We anticipate that these tables and schematics will be useful in understanding the lattice dynamics of bulk perovskites and would serve as reference point in elucidating the atomic origin of a wide range of physical properties in synthetic perovskite thin films and superlattices.



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We model short-period superlattices of WO$_3$ and ReO$_3$ with first-principles calculations. In fully-relaxed superlattices, we observe that octahedral tilts about an axis in the planes of the superlattices do not propagate from one material, despite the presence of the corner-shared oxygen atoms. However, we find that octahedral rotation is enhanced within WO$_3$ layers in cases in which strain couples with native antiferroelectric displacements of tungsten within their octahedral cages. Resulting structures remain antiferroelectric with low net global polarization. Thermodynamic analysis reveals that superlattices with sufficiently thick ReO$_3$ layers, the absolute number being three or more layers and the Re fraction $geq 50%$, tend to be more stable than the separated material phases and also show enhanced octahedral rotations in the WO$_3$ layers.
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