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111 - Zenji Hiroi 2015
The metal-insulator transition (MIT) of VO2 is discussed with particular emphasis on the structural instability of the rutile compounds toward dimerization. Ti substitution experiments reveal that the MIT is robust up to 20% Ti substitutions and occu rs even in extremely thin V-rich lamellas in spinodally decomposed TiO2-VO2 composites, indicating that the MIT is insensitive to hole doping and essentially takes on a local character. These observations suggest that either electron correlation in the Mott-Hubbard sense or Peierls (Fermi-surface) instability plays a minor role on the MIT. Through a broad perspective of crystal chemistry on the rutile-related compounds, it is noted that VO2 and another MIT compound NbO2 in the family eventually lie just near the borderline between the two structural groups with the regular rutile structure and the distorted structures characterized by the formation of dimers with direct metal-metal bonding. The MITs of VO2 and NbO2 are natural consequences of structural transitions between the two groups, as all the d electrons are trapped in the bonding molecular orbitals of dimers at low temperatures. Such dimer crystals are ubiquitously found in early transition metal compounds having chain-like structures, such as MoBr3, NbCl4, Ti4O7, and V4O7, the latter two of which also exhibit MITs probably of the same origin. In a broader sense, the dimer crystal is a kind of molecular orbital crystals in which virtual molecules made of transition metal atoms with partially-filled t2g shells, such as dimers, trimers or larger ones, are generated by metal-metal bonding and are embedded into edge- or face-sharing octahedron networks of various kinds. The molecular orbital crystallization opens a natural route to stabilization of unpaired t2g electrons in crystals.
116 - Z. Hiroi , J. Yamaura , T. Hirose 2015
We investigate the metal-insulator transition (MIT) of the osmium pyrochlore oxide Cd2Os2O7 through transport and magnetization measurements. The MIT and a magnetic transition to the all-in/all-out (AIAO) order occur simultaneously at 227 K. We propo se a mechanism based on a Lifshitz transition induced by the AIAO magnetic order probably via strong spin-orbit couplings in the specific semimetallic band structure. It is suggested, moreover, that two observed puzzles, a finite conductivity near T = 0 and an emergence of weak ferromagnetic moments, are not bulk properties but originate at magnetic domain walls between two kinds of AIAO domains.
Spinodal decomposition is a ubiquitous phenomenon leading to phase separation from a uniform solution. We show that a spinodal decomposition occurs in a unique combination of two rutile compounds of TiO2 and VO2, which are chemically and physically d istinguished from each other: TiO2 is a wide-gap insulator with photo catalytic activities and VO2 is assumed to be a strongly correlated electron system which exhibits a dramatic metal-insulator transition at 342 K. The spinodal decomposition takes place below 830 K at a critical composition of 34 mol% Ti, generates a unidirectional composition modulation along the c axis with a wavelength of approximately 6 nm, and finally results in the formation of self-assembled lamella structures made up of Ti-rich and V-rich layers stacked alternately with 30-50 nm wavelengths. A metal-insulator transition is not observed in quenched solid solutions with intermediate compositions but emerges in the thin V-rich layers as the result of phase separation. Interestingly, the metal-insulator transition remains as sharp as in pure VO2 even in such thin layers and takes place at significantly reduced temperatures of 310-340 K, which is probably due to a large misfit strain induced by lattice matching at the coherent interface.
We find anomalously large diamagnetic responses in the cage compounds AV2Al20 where A = Y and La, not A = Al0.3, Sc0.4, and Lu, despite the apparent similarities in crystal and electronic structures among these compounds. The magnetic susceptibilitie s of the Y and La compounds become -1.94 and -7.44 x 10-4 cm3 mol-1 at 10 K, respectively, the latter of which corresponds to approximately one-quarter of that of bismuth, a well-known diamagnetic material, in terms of unit volume. The origin is not clear but may be related to a specific evolution in the band structure, as the diamagnetic response increases with increasing lattice constant.
Low-energy rattling modes and their effects on superconductivity are studied in the cage compound GaxV2Al20. A series of polycrystalline samples of 0 < x =< 0.6 are examined through resistivity, magnetic susceptibility, and heat capacity measurements . A weak-coupling BCS superconductivity is observed below Tc = 1.4-1.7 K for all the samples. For small Ga contents below 0.20, approximately 30% of the cages are occupied by rattling Al atoms having an Einstein temperature TE of 23 K, probably with most Ga atoms substituting for the cage-forming Al atoms. For higher Ga contents, approximately 0.05 Ga and 0.25-0.35 Al atoms coexist statistically inside the cages and behave as rattlers with TE ~ 8 and 23 K, respectively. A significant effect of Ga rattling on the superconductivity is clearly evidenced by the observation of a sharp rise in Tc by 8% at x = 0.20 when 0.05 Ga atoms are introduced into the case. Probably, the electron-phonon interaction is significantly enhanced by an additional contribution to the phonon density of states from the extremely low energy rattling modes of Ga atoms. In addition, a large softening of the acoustic modes is observed for x => 0.20, suggesting that the cage itself becomes anomalously soft in the presence of low-energy Ga rattling modes.
A cage compound AxV2Al20 (Al10V), that was called an Einstein solid by Caplin and coworkers 40 years ago, is revisited to investigate the low-energy, local vibrations of the A atoms and their influence on the electronic and superconducting properties of the compound. Polycrystalline samples with A = Al, Ga, Y, and La are studied through resistivity and heat capacity measurements. Weak-coupling BCS superconductivity is observed below Tc = 1.49, 1.66, and 0.69 K for Ax = Al0.3, Ga0.2, and Y, respectively, but not above 0.4 K for Ax = La. Low-energy modes are detected only for A = Al and Ga, which are approximately described by the Einstein model with Einstein temperatures of 24 and 8 K, respectively. A weak but significant coupling between the low-energy modes, which are almost identical to those called rattling in recent study, and conduction electrons manifests itself as anomalous enhancement in resistivity at around low temperatures corresponding to the Einstein temperatures.
Rattling-induced superconductivity in the {beta}-pyrochlore oxide KOs2O6 is investigated under high pressure up to 5 GPa. Resistivity measurements in a high-quality single crystal reveal a gradual decrease in the superconducting transition temperatur e Tc from 9.7 K at 1.0 GPa to 6.5 K at 3.5 GPa, followed by a sudden drop to 3.3 K at 3.6 GPa. Powder X-ray diffraction experiments show a structural transition from cubic to monoclinic or triclinic at a similar pressure. The sudden drop in Tc is ascribed to this structural tran-sition, by which an enhancement in Tc due to a strong electron-rattler interaction present in the low-pressure cubic phase is abrogated as the rattling of the K ion is completely suppressed or weakened in the high-pressure phase of reduced symmetry. In addition, we find two anomalies in the temperature dependence of resistivity in the low-pressure phase, which may be due to subtle changes in rattling vibration.
204 - Z. Hiroi , S. Yonezawa , Y. Nagao 2007
Superconducting and normal-state properties of the beta-pyrochlore oxide KOs2O6 are studied by means of thermodynamic and transport measurements. It is shown that the superconductivity is of conventional s-wave type and lies in the extremely strong-c oupling regime. Specific heat and resistivity measurements reveal that there are characteristic low-energy phonons that give rise to unusual scattering of carriers due to strong electron-phonon interactions. The entity of the low-energy phonons is ascribed to the heavy rattling of the K ion confined in an oversized cage made of OsO6 octahedra. It is suggested that this electron-rattler coupling mediates the Cooper pairing, resulting in the extremely strong-coupling superconductivity.
Electronic properties of the sodium cobaltate NaxCoO2 are systematically studied through a precise control of band filling. Resistivity, magnetic susceptibility and specific heat measurements are carried out on a series of high-quality polycrystallin e samples prepared at 200 C with Na content in a wide range of 0.35 =< x =< 0.70. It is found that dramatic changes in electronic properties take place at a critical Na concentration x* that lies between 0.58 and 0.59, which separates a Pauli paramagnetic and a Curie-Weiss metals. It is suggested that at x* the Fermi level touches the bottom of the a1g band at the gamma point, leading to a crucial change in the density of states across x* and the emergence of a small electron pocket around the gamma point for x > x*.
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