Hybrid Local-Order Mechanism for Inversion Symmetry Breaking


Abstract in English

Using classical Monte Carlo simulations, we study a simple statistical mechanical model of relevance to the emergence of polarisation from local displacements on the square and cubic lattices. Our model contains two key ingredients: a Kitaev-like orientation-dependent interaction between nearest neighbours, and a steric term that acts between next-nearest neighbours. Taken by themselves, each of these two ingredients is incapable of driving long-range symmetry breaking, despite the presence of a broad feature in the corresponding heat capacity functions. Instead each component results in a hidden transition on cooling to a manifold of degenerate states, the two manifolds are different in the sense that they reflect distinct types of local order. Remarkably, their intersection---emph{i.e.} the ground state when both interaction terms are included in the Hamiltonian---supports a spontaneous polarisation. In this way, our study demonstrates how local ordering mechanisms might be combined to break global inversion symmetry in a manner conceptually similar to that operating in the hybrid improper ferroelectrics. We discuss the relevance of our analysis to the emergence of spontaneous polarisation in well-studied ferroelectrics such as BaTiO$_3$ and KNbO$_3$.

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