Giant lattice softening at a Lifshitz transition in Sr 2 RuO 4 .
H M L NoadK IshidaY-S LiElena GatiNaoki KikugawaDmitry A SokolovMichael NicklasBongjae KimIgor I MazinMarkus GarstJörg SchmalianAndrew P MackenzieClifford W HicksPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2023)
The interplay of electronic and structural degrees of freedom in solids is a topic of intense research. More than 60 years ago, Lifshitz discussed a counterintuitive possibility: lattice softening driven by conduction electrons at topological Fermi surface transitions. The effect that he predicted, however, was small and has not been convincingly observed. Using a piezo-based uniaxial pressure cell to tune the ultraclean metal strontium ruthenate while measuring the stress-strain relationship, we reveal a huge softening of the Young's modulus at a Lifshitz transition of a two-dimensional Fermi surface and show that it is indeed driven entirely by the conduction electrons of the relevant energy band.