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Nanotextured phase coexistence in the correlated insulator V2O3
Author(s) -
Alexander McLeod,
Erik van Heumen,
Juan Gabriel Ramírez,
S. Wang,
Thomas Saerbeck,
Stefan Gué,
Michael Goldflam,
Loïc Anderegg,
P. Kelly,
A. Mueller,
M. K. Liu,
Iván K. Schuller,
D. N. Basov
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
nature physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.157
H-Index - 309
eISSN - 1745-2481
pISSN - 1745-2473
DOI - 10.1038/nphys3882
Subject(s) - metal–insulator transition , condensed matter physics , phase transition , insulator (electricity) , mott insulator , physics , coulomb , nanoscopic scale , percolation (cognitive psychology) , mott transition , materials science , nanotechnology , chemical physics , electron , metal , hubbard model , optoelectronics , superconductivity , quantum mechanics , neuroscience , metallurgy , biology
The insulator–metal transition remains among the most studied phenomena in correlated electron physics. However, the spontaneous formation of spatial patterns amidst insulator–metal phase coexistence remains poorly explored on the meso- and nanoscales. Here we present real-space evolution of the insulator–metal transition in a V2O3 thin film imaged at high spatial resolution by cryogenic near-field infrared microscopy. We resolve spontaneously nanotextured coexistence of metal and correlated Mott insulator phases near the insulator–metal transition (~160–180 K) associated with percolation and an underlying structural phase transition. Augmented with macroscopic temperature-resolved X-ray diffraction measurements of the same film, a quantitative analysis of nano-infrared images acquired across the transition suggests decoupling of electronic and structural transformations. Persistent low-temperature metallicity is accompanied by unconventional critical behaviour, implicating the long-range Coulomb interaction as a driving force through the film’s first-order insulator–metal transition. Download references

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