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Ultrathin, rutile Mott insulator VO<sub>2</sub> investigated by optical spectroscopy

ORAL

Abstract

Transition metal oxides exhibit diverse emergent phenomena such as strongly correlated Mott insulating states, high-temperature superconductivity, magnetic and structural phase transitions, and metal-insulator transitions. Here, we focus on the thermally-driven metal-insulator transition (MIT) in vanadium dioxide (VO2). It is controversial whether the MIT in a thick VO2 film is accompanied by a simultaneous structural phase transition (SPT) or whether the MIT and SPT occur at different temperatures. The SPT is a Peierls ordering of all the vanadium atoms into dimerized pairs. Some theoretical proposals have been advanced to explain the MIT as a Peierls transition in which the SPT is assigned a crucial role. Here we report experiments on ultrathin VO2 film on rutile (001) TiO2. We demonstrate an insulating phase in ultrathin, rutile VO2 without Peierls ordering. The energy gap in rutile, insulating VO2 arises from electron-electron interactions, not from the pairing of vanadium atoms. Hence, the MIT studied in our work is a manifestation of a Mott transition.

Presenters

  • David Lahneman

    Department of Physics, William & Mary, Department of Physics, College of William & Mary

Authors

  • David Lahneman

    Department of Physics, William & Mary, Department of Physics, College of William & Mary

  • Muhammad M Qazilbash

    Department of Physics, William & Mary, Department of Physics, College of William & Mary

  • Douglas B. Beringer

    Applied Research Center, College of William & Mary

  • Tetiana Slusar

    Metal-Insulator Transition Laboratory, ETRI, Metal-Insulator Transition Laboratory, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute

  • Hyun-Tak Kim

    Electronics & Telecommunications Research Institute, Metal-Insulator Transition Laboratory, ETRI, Metal-Insulator Transition Laboratory, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute, MIT Lab, ETRI in Korea