Revealing a distortive polar order buried in the Fermi sea.
Jiaojian ShiWenjing YouXian LiFrank Y GaoXinyue PengShangjie ZhangJiangxu LiYang ZhangLiang FuPatrick J TaylorKeith A NelsonEdoardo BaldiniPublished in: Science advances (2024)
Polar metals are challenging to identify spectroscopically because the fingerprints of electric polarization are often obscured by the presence of screening charges. Here, we unravel unambiguous signatures of a distortive polar order buried in the Fermi sea by probing the nonlinear optical response of materials driven by tailored terahertz fields. We apply this strategy to investigate the topological crystalline insulator Pb 1- x Sn x Te, tracking its soft phonon mode in the time domain and observing the occurrence of inversion symmetry breaking as a function of temperature. By combining measurements across the material's phase diagram with ab initio calculations, we demonstrate the generality of our approach. These results highlight the potential of terahertz driving fields to reveal polar orders coexisting with itinerant electrons, thus opening additional avenues for material discovery.
Keyphrases
- ionic liquid
- genome wide
- risk assessment
- molecular dynamics simulations
- human health
- small molecule
- high resolution
- molecular dynamics
- density functional theory
- high throughput
- health risk
- magnetic resonance imaging
- single molecule
- computed tomography
- smoking cessation
- high speed
- mass spectrometry
- drinking water
- climate change