posted on 2021-07-15, 20:44authored byEmma Berger, Sasawat Jamnuch, Can B. Uzundal, Clarisse Woodahl, Hari Padmanabhan, Angelique Amado, Paul Manset, Yasuyuki Hirata, Yuya Kubota, Shigeki Owada, Kensuke Tono, Makina Yabashi, Cuixiang Wang, Youguo Shi, Venkatraman Gopalan, Craig P. Schwartz, Walter S. Drisdell, Iwao Matsuda, John W. Freeland, Tod A. Pascal, Michael Zuerch
The coexistence of ferroelectricity and metallicity seems paradoxical,
since the itinerant electrons in metals should screen the long-range
dipole interactions necessary for dipole ordering. The recent discovery
of the polar metal LiOsO3 was therefore surprising [as
discussed earlier in Y. Shi et al., Nat. Mater. 2013, 12, 1024]. It is thought that the coordination
preferences of the Li play a key role in stabilizing the LiOsO3 polar metal phase, but an investigation from the combined
viewpoints of core-state specificity and symmetry has yet to be done.
Here, we apply the novel technique of extreme ultraviolet second harmonic
generation (XUV-SHG) and find a sensitivity to the broken inversion
symmetry in the polar metal phase of LiOsO3 with an enhanced
feature above the Li K-edge that reflects the degree of Li atom displacement
as corroborated by density functional theory calculations. These results
pave the way for time-resolved probing of symmetry-breaking structural
phase transitions on femtosecond time scales with element specificity.