Quantum criticality in ferroelectrics
S.E. Rowley, L.J. Spalek, R.P. Smith, M.P.M. Dean, G.G. Lonzarich,, J.F. Scott, S.S. Saxena

TL;DR
This paper investigates quantum criticality in ferroelectric materials like SrTiO3 and KTaO3, revealing unconventional dielectric behavior near zero temperature phase transitions and proposing potential links to emergent phenomena such as superconductivity.
Contribution
It provides high-precision experimental data on ferroelectrics near quantum critical points and introduces a model describing their quantum critical behavior, highlighting new physical effects.
Findings
Unconventional 1/T^2 dielectric constant dependence at low temperatures.
Emergence of a frequency-independent peak near 2-3K in dielectric constant.
Potential for quantum paraelectric fluctuations to mediate electron interactions.
Abstract
Materials tuned to the neighbourhood of a zero temperature phase transition often show the emergence of novel quantum phenomena. Much of the effort to study these new effects, like the breakdown of the conventional Fermi-liquid theory of metals has been focused in narrow band electronic systems. Ferroelectric crystals provide a very different type of quantum criticality that arises purely from the crystalline lattice. In many cases the ferroelectric phase can be tuned to absolute zero using hydrostatic pressure or chemical or isotopic substitution. Close to such a zero temperature phase transition, the dielectric constant and other quantities change into radically unconventional forms due to the quantum fluctuations of the electrical polarization. The simplest ferroelectrics may form a text-book paradigm of quantum criticality in the solid-state as the difficulties found in metals due…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Rare-earth and actinide compounds · Solid-state spectroscopy and crystallography
