The mechanism behind SnO metallization under high pressure

Asaf Pesach, Long Nguyen, Federico A. Gorelli, Roberto Bini, Refael Hevroni, Mark Nikolaevsky, Antonio M. dos Santos, Christopher A. Tulk, Jamie J. Molaison, Reuben Shuker, Aviva Melchior, El'ad N. Caspi, Ran Salem, Guy Makov, Eran Sterer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

SnO is known to undergo metallization at ∼ 5 GPa while retaining its tetragonal symmetry. However, the mechanism of this metallization remains speculative. We present a combined experimental and computational study including pressure-dependent infrared spectroscopy, resistivity, and neutron powder diffraction measurements. We show that, while the excess charge mobility increases with pressure, the lattice distortion, in terms of the z-position of Sn, is reduced. Both processes follow a similar trend that consists of two stages, a moderate increment up to ∼ 3 GPa followed by a rapid increase at higher pressure. This behavior is discussed in terms of polaron delocalization. The pressure-induced delocalization is dictated by the electron–phonon coupling and related local anisotropic lattice distortion at the polaron site. We show that these polaronic states are stable at 0 GPa with a binding energy of ∼ 0.35 eV. Upon increasing the pressure, the polaron binding energy is reduced with the electron–phonon coupling strength of Γ and M modes, enabling the electrical phase transition to occur at ∼ 3.8 GPa. Further compression increases the total electron–phonon coupling strength up to a maximum at 10 GPa, which is a strong evidence of dome-shaped superconductivity transition with Tc = 1.67 K.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105750
JournalResults in Physics
Volume39
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2022

Funding

G.M. acknowledges the support of the Israel Ministry of Science and Technology. E.S. acknowledge the support of the Pazy Foundation Grant 326-1/22. The IR measurements were taken at the LENS lab in Florence and sponsored by grant No. LENS 000373. A portion of this research used resources at the Spallation Neutron Source, a DOE Office of Science User Facility operated by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

FundersFunder number
Office of Science
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Ministry of Science and Technology, Israel
PAZY FoundationLENS 000373, 326-1/22

    Keywords

    • High Pressure
    • Neutron diffraction
    • Phase transition
    • Polaron
    • metallization

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