Volume-wise destruction of the antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state through quantum tuning
Benjamin A. Frandsen, Lian Liu, Sky C. Cheung, Zurab Guguchia, Rustem, Khasanov, Elvezio Morenzoni, Timothy J. S. Munsie, Alannah M. Hallas, Murray, N. Wilson, Yipeng Cai, Graeme M. Luke, Bijuan Chen, Wenmin Li, Changqing Jin,, Cui Ding, Shengli Guo, Fanlong Ning, Takashi U. Ito

TL;DR
This study provides direct experimental evidence that the quantum phase transition from antiferromagnetic insulator to paramagnetic metal in Mott systems is first-order, characterized by phase separation and abrupt magnetic moment destruction.
Contribution
It offers the first direct muon spin relaxation/rotation evidence showing the first-order nature of the Mott quantum phase transition in specific materials.
Findings
QPT is first-order with phase separation.
Magnetic volume fraction decreases to zero at QPT.
Magnetic moment remains full until abrupt destruction.
Abstract
Metal-to-insulator transitions (MITs) are a dramatic manifestation of strong electron correlations in solids1. The insulating phase can often be suppressed by quantum tuning, i.e. varying a nonthermal parameter such as chemical composi- tion or pressure, resulting in a zero-temperature quantum phase transition (QPT) to a metallic state driven by quantum fluctuations, in contrast to conventional phase transitions driven by thermal fluctuations. Theories of exotic phenomena known to occur near the Mott QPT such as quantum criticality and high-temperature superconductivity often assume a second-order QPT, but direct experimental evidence for either first- or second-order behavior at the magnetic QPT associated with the Mott transition has been scarce and further masked by the superconducting phase in unconventional superconductors. Most measurements of QPTs have been performed by…
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