Manipulation of Rashba splitting and thermoelectric performance of MTe (M = Ge, Sn, Pb) via Te off-centering distortion†
Abstract
The Rashba effect is an essential phenomenon in asymmetrical ferroelectric materials with local dipole fields. Rashba spin splitting due to spin–orbit coupling in the asymmetrical 2D ferroelectricity MTe (M = Ge, Sn, Pb) has provided a promising arena for achieving an ultra-high power factor to improve their thermoelectric performance. Herein, we show that the hidden Rashba effect may exist in centrosymmetric rock-salt MTe because of the emerging macroscopic electric dipoles caused by the local Te off-centering distortion. Using first-principles calculations, we prove that Te off-centering causes a change in the atomic reciprocal displacement and induces a ferroelectric Rashba effect in rock-salt MTe. Further analyses of the energy evaluation, lattice vibration and chemical orbital confirm that the atomic off-centering behavior manipulates Rashba spin splitting and stereochemical irregularities of the s2 lone electron pair of the cation, leading to the formation of strong anharmonic bonds in the original high-symmetry crystalline solids. The changes of the phonon dispersion and electronic structure also affect the electron–phonon scattering and scattering mechanism of MTe, which then manipulates the electrical transport properties. This work unravels the underlying physics on how the local Te off-centering distortion manipulates Rashba spin splitting and improves the thermoelectric performance of MTe.