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Giant Nernst effect and bipolarity in the quasi-one-dimensional metal, Li(0.9)Mo(6)O(17)

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 Added by Joshua L. Cohn
 Publication date 2012
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The Nernst coefficient for the quasi-one-dimensional metal, Li(0.9)Mo(6)O(17), is found to be among the largest known for metals (~500 microV/KT at T~20K), and is enhanced in a broad range of temperature by orders of magnitude over the value expected from Boltzmann theory for carrier diffusion. A comparatively small Seebeck coefficient implies that Li(0.9)Mo(6)O(17) is bipolar with large, partial Seebeck coefficients of opposite sign. A very large thermomagnetic figure of merit, ZT~0.5, is found at high field in the range T~35-50K.



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A correlation between lattice parameters, oxygen composition, and the thermoelectric and Hall coefficients is presented for single-crystal Li(0.9)Mo(6)O(17), a quasi-one-dimensional (Q1D) metallic compound. The possibility that this compound is a compensated metal is discussed in light of a substantial variability observed in the literature for these transport coefficients.
Thermopower and electrical resistivity measurements transverse to the conducting chains of the quasi-one-dimensional metal Li(0.9)Mo(6)O(17) are reported in the temperature range 5 K <= T <= 500 K. For T>= 400 K the interchain transport is determined by thermal excitation of charge carriers from a valence band ~ 0.14 eV below the Fermi level, giving rise to a large, p-type thermopower that coincides with a small, n-type thermopower along the chains. This dichotomy -- semiconductor-like in one direction and metallic in a mutually perpendicular direction -- gives rise to substantial transverse thermoelectric (TE) effects and a transverse TE figure of merit among the largest known for a single compound.
We report a detailed magnetotransport study of the highly anisotropic quasi-one-dimensional oxide Li$_{0.9}$Mo$_6$O$_{17}$ whose in-chain electrical resistivity diverges below a temperature $T_{rm min} sim$ 25 K. For $T < T_{rm min}$, a magnetic field applied parallel to the conducting chain induces a large negative magnetoresistance and ultimately, the recovery of a metallic state. We show evidence that this insulator/metal crossover is a consequence of field-induced suppression of a density-wave gap in a highly one-dimensional conductor. At the highest fields studied, there is evidence for the possible emergence of a novel superconducting state with an onset temperature $T_c >$ 10 K.
The upper critical field $H_{c2}$ of purple bronze Li$_{0.9}$Mo$_6$O$_{17}$ is found to exhibit a large anisotropy, in quantitative agreement with that expected from the observed electrical resistivity anisotropy. With the field aligned along the most conducting axis, $H_{c2}$ increases monotonically with decreasing temperature to a value five times larger than the estimated paramagnetic pair-breaking field. Theories for the enhancement of $H_{c2}$ invoking spin-orbit scattering or strong-coupling superconductivity are shown to be inadequate in explaining the observed behavior, suggesting that the pairing state in Li$_{0.9}$Mo$_6$O$_{17}$ is unconventional and possibly spin-triplet.
We present the results of a combined study by band theory and angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) of the purple bronze, Li$_{1-x}$Mo$_{6}$O$_{17}$. Structural and electronic origins of its unusually robust quasi-one dimensional (quasi-1D) behavior are investigated in detail. The band structure, in a large energy window around the Fermi energy, is basically 2D and formed by three Mo $t_{2g}$-like extended Wannier orbitals, each one giving rise to a 1D band running at a 120$^circ$ angle to the two others. A structural dimerization from $mathbf{c}/2$ to $mathbf{c}$ gaps the $xz$ and $yz$ bands while leaving the $xy$ bands metallic in the gap, but resonantly coupled to the gap edges and, hence, to the other directions. The resulting complex shape of the quasi-1D Fermi surface (FS), verified by our ARPES, thus depends strongly on the Fermi energy position in the gap, implying a great sensitivity to Li stoichiometry of properties dependent on the FS, such as FS nesting or superconductivity. The strong resonances prevent either a two-band tight-binding model or a related real-space ladder picture from giving a valid description of the low-energy electronic structure. We use our extended knowledge of the electronic structure to newly advocate for framing LiMo$_{6}$O$_{17}$ as a weak-coupling material and in that framework can rationalize both the robustness of its quasi-1D behavior and the rather large value of its Luttinger liquid (LL) exponent $alpha$. Down to a temperature of 6$,$K we find no evidence for a theoretically expected downward renormalization of perpendicular single particle hopping due to LL fluctuations in the quasi-1D chains.
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