Mott transition and collective charge pinning in electron doped Sr2IrO4

ORAL

Abstract

We studied the in-plane dynamic and static charge conductivity of electron doped Sr2IrO4 using optical spectroscopy and DC transport measurements. The optical conductivity indicates that the pristine material is an indirect semiconductor with a direct Mott gap of 0.55 eV. Upon substitution of 2% La per formula unit the Mott gap is suppressed except in a small fraction of the material (15%) where the gap survives, and overall the material remains insulating. Instead of a zero energy mode (or Drude peak) we observe a soft collective mode (SCM) with a broad maximum at 40 meV. Doping to 10% increases the strength of the SCM, and a zero-energy mode occurs together with metallic DC conductivity. Further increase of the La substitution doesn't change the spectral weight integral up to 3 eV. It does however result in a transfer of the SCM spectral weight to the zero-energy mode, with a corresponding reduction of the DC resistivity for all temperatures from 4 to 300 K. The presence of a zero-energy mode signals that at least part of the Fermi surface remains ungapped at low temperatures, whereas the SCM appears to be caused by pinning a collective frozen state involving part of the doped electrons.

Presenters

  • Nimrod Bachar

    Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva

Authors

  • Kai Wang

    Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva

  • Nimrod Bachar

    Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva

  • Jeremie Teyssier

    Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva

  • Weiwei Luo

    Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva

  • Willem Rischau

    Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva, University of Geneva

  • Gernot Scheerer

    Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva, University of Geneva

  • Alberto De la Torre

    Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva, Department of Physics, California Institute of Technology, Caltech

  • Robin S. Perry

    University College London, Physics Department, University College London, UCL, London Centre for Nanotechnology and UCL Centre for Materials Discovery, University College London

  • Felix Baumberger

    Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva

  • Dirk Van Der Marel

    University of Geneva, Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva