A continuous Mott transition between a metal and a quantum spin liquid

ORAL

Abstract

More than half a century after first being proposed by Sir Nevill Mott, the deceptively simple question of whether the interaction-driven electronic metal-insulator transition may be continuous remains enigmatic. Recent experiments on two-dimensional materials suggest that when the insulator is a quantum spin liquid, lack of magnetic long-range order on the insulating side may cause the transition to be continuous, or only very weakly first order. Motivated by this, we study a half-filled extended Hubbard model on a triangular lattice strip geometry. We argue, through use of large-scale numerical simulations and analytical bosonization, that this model harbors a continuous (Kosterlitz-Thouless-like) quantum phase transition between a metal and a gapless spin liquid characterized by a spinon Fermi sea, i.e., a ``spin Bose metal''. These results may provide a rare insight into the development of Mott criticality in strongly interacting two-dimensional materials and elucidate a mechanism by which spin-liquid phases are stabilized in the vicinity of such transitions.

Authors

  • Ryan V. Mishmash

    Caltech and UCSB

  • Ivan Gonzalez

    CESGA

  • Roger Melko

    University of Waterloo and Perimeter Institute, University of Waterloo, Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Waterloo and Perimeter Institute, University of Waterloo, University of Waterloo, Perimeter Institute, University of Waterloo / Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

  • Olexei I. Motrunich

    California Institute of Technology, Caltech

  • Matthew Fisher

    UCSB, UC Santa Barbara