4.3 Article

Vibrational properties of LiNbO3 and LiTaO3 under uniaxial stress

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW MATERIALS
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.7.024420

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This paper analyzes the phonon frequencies of lithium niobate and lithium tantalate under uniaxial strain using density functional theory and mu-Raman spectroscopy. The majority of phonons show an increase in frequency under compressive strain, while the opposite is observed for tensile strains. Additionally, the lifting of degeneracy of E-type phonons is observed at moderate strain fields. This study allows for the systematic analysis of three-dimensional strains in devices assembled from lithium niobate and tantalate.
Structural strain severely impacts material properties, such as the linear and nonlinear optical response. Moreover, strain plays a key role, e.g., in the physics of ferroelectrics and, in particular, of their domain walls. mu-Raman spectroscopy is a well-suited technique for the investigation of such strain effects as it allows to measure the lattice dynamics locally. However, quantifying and reconstructing strain fields from Raman maps requires knowledge on the strain dependence of phonon frequencies. In this paper, we have analyzed both theoretically and experimentally the phonon frequencies in the widely used ferroelectrics lithium niobate and lithium tantalate as a function of uniaxial strain via density functional theory and mu-Raman spectroscopy. Overall, we find a good agreement between our ab initio models and the experimental data performed with a stress cell. The majority of phonons show an increase in frequency under compressive strain, whereas the opposite is observed for tensile strains. Moreover, for E-type phonons, we observe the lifting of degeneracy already at moderate strain fields (i.e., at +/- 0.2%) along the x and y directions. This paper, hence, allows for the systematic analysis of three-dimensional strains in modern-type bulk and thin-film devices assembled from lithium niobate and tantalate.

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