APL Materials (May 2021)
Controlling the symmetry of cadmium arsenide films by epitaxial strain
Abstract
Epitaxial strains offer unique opportunities to obtain topological states in thin films and heterostructures that do not exist in their bulk counterparts. Here, we investigate the point group symmetries of coherently strained films of cadmium arsenide (Cd3As2), a prototype three-dimensional Dirac semimetal, by convergent beam electron diffraction. We report a loss of the fourfold rotational axis and adoption of the orthorhombic mmm point group in (112)-oriented films under biaxial compressive stress. (001)-oriented Cd3As2 films that are under a small biaxial tensile stress retain the fourfold rotational symmetry that protects the bulk nodes but adopt the non-centrosymmetric 4mm point group symmetry. This, in turn, suggests that (001) films adopt a different crystal structure in biaxial tension, one that differs in the arrangement of the ordered Cd vacancies that are an inherent feature of the crystal structure of Cd3As2 and that are key to its nodal electronic structure. Density functional theory calculations confirm the experimental findings of the stability of the non-centrosymmetric structure under biaxial tension, whereas the centrosymmetric structure is stable under biaxial compression. The results show that bulk Cd3As2 is already close to structural instability and showcase the extraordinary tunability of the topological states of Cd3As2.