Abstract

Magnetic-electronic hyperfine interaction parameters of spectral components are obtained from in situ $^{57}\mathrm{Fe}$ M\ossbauer spectroscopy pressure studies of the mixed-valence $\mathrm{LuF}{\mathrm{e}}_{2}{\mathrm{O}}_{4}$ multiferroic, up to $\ensuremath{\sim}30\phantom{\rule{0.16em}{0ex}}\mathrm{GPa}$ and on recovered high-pressure phase samples. Temperature-dependent M\ossbauer spectra of the low-pressure phase show that $\mathrm{F}{\mathrm{e}}^{2+}$ and $\mathrm{F}{\mathrm{e}}^{3+}$ sites are discernible, consistent with known site-centered charge order in the triangular (frustrated) Fe sublattice network. Magnetic spectra of the high-pressure phase, stabilized in a rectangular Fe sublattice network at $Pg8\phantom{\rule{0.16em}{0ex}}\mathrm{GPa}$, exhibit fingerprints of iron in an intermediate valence state only. Temperature-dependent resistivity pressure studies evidence thermally activated small polaron motion in the high-pressure phase. These experimental signatures, complemented by ab initio calculations of electronic structure, are considered evidence of asymmetric dimer formation ${\mathrm{Fe}}^{(2+\mathrm{\ensuremath{\Delta}}+)}\ensuremath{\Leftrightarrow}{\mathrm{Fe}}^{(3\ensuremath{-}\mathrm{\ensuremath{\Delta}})+}$, where the minority-spin electron deconfinement coefficient is $\mathrm{\ensuremath{\Delta}}=0.3\ensuremath{-}0.4$. Bragg satellites discerned in electron diffraction patterns of the metastable high-pressure phase possibly stem from this admixture of site- and bond-centered localization (intermediate-state charge order) in a magnetic background. This breaks inversion symmetry and potentially renders $\mathrm{LuF}{\mathrm{e}}_{2}{\mathrm{O}}_{4}$ in its high-pressure phase as a new charge order instigated (electronic) ferroelectric.

Highlights

  • Charge order (CO) has often been considered as a site-centered superstructure involving transition metal (TM) sites with different discrete valences

  • Temperature-dependent Mossbauer spectra of the low-pressure phase show that Fe2+ and Fe3+ sites are discernible, consistent with known site-centered charge order in the triangular Fe sublattice network

  • Bragg satellites discerned in electron diffraction patterns of the metastable high-pressure phase possibly stem from this admixture of site- and bond-centered localization in a magnetic background

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Summary

Introduction

Charge order (CO) has often been considered as a site-centered superstructure involving transition metal (TM) sites with different discrete valences. Such TM-centered CO is pictured as mobile carriers confined to a TM sublattice (e.g., t2g minority-spin electron at Fe2+) [1]. Examples are alternation of Fe2+/Fe3+ in Fe2OBO3 [2], or less definitively Mn3+/Mn4+ in La0.5Ca0.5MnO3 [3,4] The latter is less definitive because calculations show other energetically favorable CO states occur, notably (i) bond-centered CO and (ii) so-called intermediate-state CO, see Refs. In case (i), in TM oxides, oxygen ions on TM-TM bonds (e.g., perovskite) facilitate electron transfer processes, and charge carriers are confined evenly over a TM-TM symmetric dimer [6,7,8]. Carrier delocalization involves preferential confinement to a neighboring TM atom and formation of electronically asymmetric TM-TM dimers

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