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Discovery of highly-polarizable semiconductors BaZrS3 and Ba3Zr2S7

There are few known semiconductors exhibiting both strong optical response and large dielectric polarizability. Inorganic materials with large dielectric polarizability tend to be wide-band gap complex oxides. Semiconductors with strong photoresponse to visible and infrared light tend to be weakly polarizable. Interesting exceptions to these trends are halide perovskites and phase-change chalcogenides. Here we introduce complex chalcogenides in the Ba-Zr-S system in perovskite and Ruddlesden-Popper structures as a new family of highly polarizable semiconductors. We report the results of impedance spectroscopy on single crystals that establish BaZrS3 and Ba3Zr2S7 as semiconductors with low-frequency relative dielectric constant ($ε_0$) in the range 50 - 100, and band gap in the range 1.3 - 1.8 eV. Our electronic structure calculations indicate the enhanced dielectric response in perovskite BaZrS3 versus Ruddlesden-Popper Ba3Zr2S7 is primarily due to enhanced IR mode-effective charges, and variations in phonon frequencies along $\langle 001 \rangle$; differences in the Born effective charges and the lattice stiffness are of secondary importance. This combination of covalent bonding in crystal structures more common to complex oxides results in a sizable Fröhlich coupling constant, which suggests that charge carriers are large polarons.

preprint2020arXivOpen access

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