Tunneling-tip-induced collapse of the charge gap in the excitonic insulator Ta$_2$NiSe$_5$
Q. He, X. Que, L. Zhou, M. Isobe, D. Huang, and H. Takagi

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that a tunneling tip can induce a collapse of the charge gap in the excitonic insulator Ta$_2$NiSe$_5$, revealing its many-body nature and enabling a novel phase-change mechanism.
Contribution
It shows that tip-induced electrostatic effects can drastically alter the electronic phase of an excitonic insulator, providing new insights into phase control.
Findings
Collapse of the excitation gap by tip approach
Realization of a zero-gap state in Ta$_2$NiSe$_5$
Charge accumulation drives the phase change
Abstract
Tuning many-body electronic phases by an external handle is of both fundamental and practical importance in condensed matter science. The tunability mirrors the underlying interactions, and gigantic electric, optical and magnetic responses to minute external stimuli can be anticipated in the critical region of phase change. The excitonic insulator is one of the exotic phases of interacting electrons, produced by the Coulomb attraction between a small and equal number of electrons and holes, leading to the spontaneous formation of exciton pairs in narrow-gap semiconductors/semimetals. The layered chalcogenide TaNiSe has been recently discussed as such an excitonic insulator with an excitation gap of ~250 meV below = 328 K. Here, we demonstrate a drastic collapse of the excitation gap in TaNiSe and the realization of a zero-gap state by moving the tip of a cryogenic…
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