A microscopic view on the Mott transition in chromium-doped V2O3

phase separation; metal-to-insulator transition Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons Strongly Correlated Electrons (cond-mat.str-el) 0103 physical sciences FOS: Physical sciences 01 natural sciences 7. Clean energy
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms1109 Publication Date: 2010-11-02T09:15:53Z
ABSTRACT
Paper plus supplementary material<br/>V2O3 is the prototype system for the Mott transition, one of the most fundamental phenomena of electronic correlation. Temperature, doping or pressure induce a metal to insulator transition (MIT) between a paramagnetic metal (PM) and a paramagnetic insulator (PI). This or related MITs have a high technological potential, among others for intelligent windows and field effect transistors. However the spatial scale on which such transitions develop is not known in spite of their importance for research and applications. Here we unveil for the first time the MIT in Cr-doped V2O3 with submicron lateral resolution: with decreasing temperature, microscopic domains become metallic and coexist with an insulating background. This explains why the associated PM phase is actually a poor metal. The phase separation can be associated with a thermodynamic instability near the transition. This instability is reduced by pressure which drives a genuine Mott transition to an eventually homogeneous metallic state.<br/>
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