APS Logo

Rise and Fall of Landau's Quasiparticles While Approaching the Mott Transition

ORAL

Abstract

Landau suggested that the low-temperature properties of metals can be understood in terms of long-lived quasiparticles with all complex interactions included in Fermi-liquid parameters, such as the effective mass m*. Despite its wide applicability, electronic transport in bad or strange metals and unconventional superconductors is controversially discussed towards a possible collapse of the quasiparticle concept. Crucial information can be obtained by frequency-resolved probes that measure the complex optical conductivity σ1(ω) + iσ2(ω). Here we explore the electrodynamic response of correlated metals at half filling upon approaching a Mott insulator. The correlation strength U/W is varied by partial chemical substitution. We reveal persistent Fermi-liquid behavior with T2 and ω2 dependences of the optical scattering rate γ(ω), along with a puzzling elastic contribution to relaxation. The strong increase of the resistivity beyond the Ioffe-Regel-Mott limit ρ ≫ ρIRM is accompanied by a 'displaced Drude peak' in σ1(ω). Our results, supported by a theoretical model for the optical response, demonstrate the emergence of a bad metal from resilient quasiparticles that are subject to dynamical localization and dissolve near the Mott transition.

Publication: Nat. Commun. 12, 1571 (2021)<br>J. Mat. Chem. C 9, 10841 (2021)<br>npj Quantum Mater. 6, 9 (2021)<br>Crystals 11, 817 (2021)

Presenters

  • Andrej Pustogow

    TU Wien, Vienna, Austria, Inst. of Solid State Phys., TU Wien

Authors

  • Andrej Pustogow

    TU Wien, Vienna, Austria, Inst. of Solid State Phys., TU Wien

  • Yohei Saito

    University of Stuttgart, Phys. Inst., Univ. Stuttgart

  • Anja Löhle

    University of Stuttgart

  • Anja Löhle

    University of Stuttgart

  • Atsushi Kawamoto

    Hokkaido University, Japan, Dept. of Phys., Hokkaido Univ.

  • Vladimir Dobrosavljevic

    Florida State University

  • Martin Dressel

    University of Stuttgart, Phys. Inst., Univ. Stuttgart

  • Simone Fratini

    Universite Grenoble Alpes, France