Abstract
We present a theory of the linear and nonlinear optical characteristics of the insulating phase of the Falicov-Kimball model within the self-consistent mean-field approximation. The Coulomb attraction between the itinerant electrons and the localized holes gives rise to a built-in coherence between the and states, which breaks the inversion symmetry of the underlying crystal, leading to (1) electronic ferroelectricity, (2) ferroelectric resonance, and (3) a nonvanishing susceptibility for second-harmonic generation. As experimental tests of such a built-in coherence in mixed-valent compounds, we propose measurements of the static dielectric constant, the microwave absorption spectrum, and the dynamic second-order susceptibility.
- Received 28 May 1996
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.54.17452
©1996 American Physical Society