Shot noise reveals correlated hopping electron transport in SrIrO3

ORAL

Abstract

SrIrO3 is a metallic complex oxide with unusual electronic and magnetic properties believed to originate from electron correlations due to its proximity to Mott metal-insulator transition, which remain poorly understood. We studied shot noise produced by SrIrO3 nanojunctions. The junctions exhibit strong shot noise suppression and enhanced thermal broadening of noise dependence on bias, demonstrating that conduction is through charge hopping instead of diffusion. However, SrIrO3 does not show low-temperature resistivity divergence expected for single-particle hopping. Additionally, shot noise exhibits anomalous scaling with junction length, suggesting a dominant role of electron correlations. We propose that these properties can be explained by charge hopping along quasi-1D conduction paths confined by Mott singlet correlations. These findings provide insight into the non-Fermi liquid state of SrIrO3, which may be relevant to other materials close to Mott transition such as high-temperature superconductors.

*Y.Z. and S.I. acknowledge support by the NSF award ECCS-2005786, the Tarbutton fellowship, and the SEED award from the Research Corporation for Science Advancement. J.L. acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation under Grant No. DMR-1848269. S.P. acknowledges funding from the State of Tennessee and Tennessee Higher Education Commission through the Center for Materials Processing.

Publication: This work is currently under review in Nano Letters

Presenters

  • Yiou Zhang

    • Emory University

Authors

  • Yiou Zhang

    • Emory University
  • Shashi K Pandey

    • University of Tennessee
  • Sergei V Ivanov

    • Emory University
  • Jian Liu

    • University of Tennessee
  • Sergei Urazhdin

    • Emory University