EuAl4 is a rare earth intermetallic in which competing itinerant and/or indirect exchange mechanisms give rise to a complex magnetic phase diagram, including a centrosymmetric skyrmion lattice. These phenomena arise not in the tetragonal parent structure but in the presence of a charge density wave (CDW), which lowers the crystal symmetry and renormalizes the electronic structure. Microscopic knowledge of the corresponding atomic modulations and their driving mechanism is a prerequisite for a deeper understanding of the resulting equilibrium of electronic correlations and how it might be manipulated. Here, we use synchrotron single-crystal X-ray diffraction, inelastic X-ray scattering, and lattice dynamics calculations to clarify the origin of the CDW in EuAl4. We observe a broad softening of a transverse acoustic phonon mode that sets in well above room temperature and, at TCDW=142 K, freezes out in an atomic displacement mode described by the superspace group Immm(00γ)s00. In the context of previous work, our observation is a clear confirmation that the CDW in EuAl4 is driven by electron-phonon coupling. This result is relevant for a wider family of BaAl4 and ThCr2Si2-type rare-earth intermetallics known to combine CDW instabilities and complex magnetism.
@article{arxiv.2402.15397,
title = {Phonon softening and atomic modulations in EuAl$_4$},
author = {A. N. Korshunov and A. S. Sukhanov and S. Gebel and M. S. Pavlovskii and N. D. Andriushin and Y. Gao and J. M. Moya and E. Morosan and M. C. Rahn},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.15397},
year = {2024}
}