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Superstructure (condensed matter)

In solid state physics, a superstructure is some additional structure that is superimposed on a higher symmetry crystalline structure.[1] A typical and important example is ferromagnetic ordering.

In a wider sense, the term "superstructure" is applied to polymers and proteins to describe ordering on a length scale larger than that of monomeric segments.

In crystals edit

In a crystal, a superstructure manifests itself through additional reflections in diffraction patterns, e.g., in low energy electron diffraction (LEED) or X-ray diffraction experiments. Often a set of weak diffraction spots appears between the stronger spots belonging to what is referred to as the substructure. In some cases a phase transition occurs, e.g., at higher temperatures, where the superstructure disappears and the material reverts to the simpler substructure. Not all compounds exhibit a superstructure.

The superspots in diffraction patterns represent a modulation of the substructure that causes the inherent translation symmetry of the (substructure) lattice to be violated slightly or the size of the repeat motif of the structure to be increased. One could speak of symmetry breaking of the translation symmetry of the lattice, although rotational symmetry may be lost simultaneously.

Commensurate cases edit

If the superspots are located at simple fractions of the vectors of the reciprocal lattice of the substructure, e.g., at q=(½,0,0), the resulting broken symmetry is a multiple of the unit cell along that axis. Such a modulation is called a commensurate superstructure.

Incommensurate cases edit

In some materials, superspots will occur at positions that do not represent a simple fraction, say q=(0.5234,0,0). In this case the structure strictly speaking has lost all translational symmetry in a particular direction. This is called an incommensurate structure.[2]

Causes edit

There are basically three types of superstructures in crystals:

Magnetic superstructures edit

When a crystalline material that contains atoms with uncompensated electron spins is cooled down, ordering of these spins generally occurs once the thermal energy is small enough not to overrule the interactions between neighboring spins. If the ordering does not exhibit the same symmetry as the original unit cell of the crystallographic lattice, a superstructure will result. In this case, the superspots are typically only visible in neutron diffraction patterns, because the neutron is scattered both by the nucleus and by the magnetic moments of the electron spins.

Defect ordering edit

Many alloys of elements that resemble each other chemically will form a structure at higher temperatures where the two elements occupy similar positions in the lattice at random. At lower temperatures ordering may occur where crystallographic positions are no longer equivalent because one element preferentially occupies one site and the other the other. This partial ordering process may lower the translation symmetry and result in a different, larger unit cell.

Displacive transitions edit

In some transitions a number of atoms occupying crystallographic positions that were originally equivalent will move away slightly from their ideal positions according to a certain pattern. This pattern or repeat motif may span multiple unit cells. The cause of this phenomenon is the small changes in chemical bonding that favor formations of semi-regular and larger clusters of atoms. Although having the undistorted substructure, these materials are typically 'unsaturated' in the sense that one of the bands in the band structure is only partially filled. The distortion changes the band structure, in part splitting the bands up into smaller bands that can be more completely filled or emptied to lower the energy of the system. This process may not go to completion, however, because the substructure only allows for a certain amount of distortion. Superstructures of this type are often incommensurate. A good example is found in the structural transitions of 1T-TaS2, a compound with a partially filled, narrow d band (Ta(IV) has a d1 configuration).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kolli, Sanjeev; Natarajan, Anirudh; Thomas, John; Pollock, Tresa; Van der Ven, Anton (10 November 2020). "Discovering hierarchies among intermetallic crystal structures". Physical Review Materials. 4 (113604): 113604. Bibcode:2020PhRvM...4k3604K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.4.113604.
  2. ^ Brown, Philip; Semeniuk, Konstantin; Wang, Diandian; Monserrat, Bartomeu; Pickard, Chris J.; Grosche, F. Malte (2018-04-01). "Strong coupling superconductivity in a quasiperiodic host–guest structure". Science Advances. 4 (4): eaao4793. Bibcode:2018SciA....4.4793B. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aao4793. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 5898833. PMID 29662950.

superstructure, condensed, matter, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, superstructure, condensed, matter. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Superstructure condensed matter news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message In solid state physics a superstructure is some additional structure that is superimposed on a higher symmetry crystalline structure 1 A typical and important example is ferromagnetic ordering In a wider sense the term superstructure is applied to polymers and proteins to describe ordering on a length scale larger than that of monomeric segments Contents 1 In crystals 1 1 Commensurate cases 1 2 Incommensurate cases 2 Causes 2 1 Magnetic superstructures 2 2 Defect ordering 2 3 Displacive transitions 3 See also 4 ReferencesIn crystals editIn a crystal a superstructure manifests itself through additional reflections in diffraction patterns e g in low energy electron diffraction LEED or X ray diffraction experiments Often a set of weak diffraction spots appears between the stronger spots belonging to what is referred to as the substructure In some cases a phase transition occurs e g at higher temperatures where the superstructure disappears and the material reverts to the simpler substructure Not all compounds exhibit a superstructure The superspots in diffraction patterns represent a modulation of the substructure that causes the inherent translation symmetry of the substructure lattice to be violated slightly or the size of the repeat motif of the structure to be increased One could speak of symmetry breaking of the translation symmetry of the lattice although rotational symmetry may be lost simultaneously Commensurate cases edit If the superspots are located at simple fractions of the vectors of the reciprocal lattice of the substructure e g at q 0 0 the resulting broken symmetry is a multiple of the unit cell along that axis Such a modulation is called a commensurate superstructure Incommensurate cases edit In some materials superspots will occur at positions that do not represent a simple fraction say q 0 5234 0 0 In this case the structure strictly speaking has lost all translational symmetry in a particular direction This is called an incommensurate structure 2 Causes editThere are basically three types of superstructures in crystals Magnetic superstructures edit When a crystalline material that contains atoms with uncompensated electron spins is cooled down ordering of these spins generally occurs once the thermal energy is small enough not to overrule the interactions between neighboring spins If the ordering does not exhibit the same symmetry as the original unit cell of the crystallographic lattice a superstructure will result In this case the superspots are typically only visible in neutron diffraction patterns because the neutron is scattered both by the nucleus and by the magnetic moments of the electron spins Defect ordering edit Many alloys of elements that resemble each other chemically will form a structure at higher temperatures where the two elements occupy similar positions in the lattice at random At lower temperatures ordering may occur where crystallographic positions are no longer equivalent because one element preferentially occupies one site and the other the other This partial ordering process may lower the translation symmetry and result in a different larger unit cell Displacive transitions edit In some transitions a number of atoms occupying crystallographic positions that were originally equivalent will move away slightly from their ideal positions according to a certain pattern This pattern or repeat motif may span multiple unit cells The cause of this phenomenon is the small changes in chemical bonding that favor formations of semi regular and larger clusters of atoms Although having the undistorted substructure these materials are typically unsaturated in the sense that one of the bands in the band structure is only partially filled The distortion changes the band structure in part splitting the bands up into smaller bands that can be more completely filled or emptied to lower the energy of the system This process may not go to completion however because the substructure only allows for a certain amount of distortion Superstructures of this type are often incommensurate A good example is found in the structural transitions of 1T TaS2 a compound with a partially filled narrow d band Ta IV has a d1 configuration See also editOverlayer LEED SuperstructuresReferences edit Kolli Sanjeev Natarajan Anirudh Thomas John Pollock Tresa Van der Ven Anton 10 November 2020 Discovering hierarchies among intermetallic crystal structures Physical Review Materials 4 113604 113604 Bibcode 2020PhRvM 4k3604K doi 10 1103 PhysRevMaterials 4 113604 Brown Philip Semeniuk Konstantin Wang Diandian Monserrat Bartomeu Pickard Chris J Grosche F Malte 2018 04 01 Strong coupling superconductivity in a quasiperiodic host guest structure Science Advances 4 4 eaao4793 Bibcode 2018SciA 4 4793B doi 10 1126 sciadv aao4793 ISSN 2375 2548 PMC 5898833 PMID 29662950 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Superstructure condensed matter amp oldid 1117768292, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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