Electrical properties of improper ferroelectrics from first principles
arXiv:1207.3625 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.86.094112
Abstract
We study the interplay of structural and polar distortions in hexagonal YMnO3 and short-period PbTiO3/SrTiO3 superlattices by means of first-principles calculations at constrained electric displacement field D. We find that in YMnO3 the tilts of the oxygen polyhedra produce a robustly polar ground state, which persists at any choice of the electrical boundary conditions. Conversely, in PTO/STO the antiferrodistortive instabilities alone do not break inversion symmetry, and open-circuit bundary conditions restore a non-polar state. We suggest that this qualitative difference naturally provides a route to rationalizing the concept of "improper ferroelectricity" from the point of view of first-principles theory. We discuss the implications of our arguments for the design of novel multiferroic materials with enhanced functionalities, and for the symmetry analysis of the phase transitions.
9 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables