Parting the Fermi Sea at the Mott Point: Dynamics of Correlated Electrons Reveals the Mechanism Underpinning Mottness
ORAL
Abstract
By increasing the interaction among conduction electrons, a Fermi-liquid-type metal turns into a Mott insulator. This first-order phase transition should exhibit a regime where the adjacent ground states coexist, leading to electronic phase separation, but the range near T=0 remained unexplored because it is commonly concealed by antiferromagnetism. Here we map the genuine low-temperature Mott transition by applying dielectric spectroscopy under pressure to quantum-spin-liquid compounds. The dielectric permittivity uniquely distinguishes all conduction regimes around the Mott point, allowing us to reliably detect insulator-metal phase coexistence below the critical endpoint. Via state-of-the-art theoretical modeling we establish the coupling between segregated metallic puddles as the driving source of a colossal peak in the permittivity reaching ε1≈105 within the coexistence region. Our results indicate that the observed inhomogeneities are the consequence of phase separation emerging from strong correlation effects inherent to Mottness,suggesting a similar ’dielectric catastrophe’ in other correlated materials.
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Presenters
Yuting Tan
Natl High Magnetic Field Lab, NHMFL, Florida State Univerisity
Authors
Yuting Tan
Natl High Magnetic Field Lab, NHMFL, Florida State Univerisity
Andrej Pustogow
University of California, Los Angeles
Roland Rösslhuber
Physikalisches Institut, Universitat Stuttgart
Ece Uykur
Physikalisches Institut, Universitat Stuttgart
Annette Böhme
Physikalisches Institut, Universitat Stuttgart
Anja Löhle
Physikalisches Institut, Universitat Stuttgart
Ralph Hübner
Physikalisches Institut, Universitat Stuttgart
John A Schlueter
National Science Foundation, Division of Materials Research, National Science Foundation, Division of Material Research, National Science Foundation
Vladimir Dobrosavljevic
Florida state University, NHMFL, Florida State Univerisity