Two-component electronic phase separation in the doped Mott insulator Y$_{1-x}$Ca$_{x}$TiO$_{3}$
S. Hameed, J. Joe, D. M. Gautreau, J. W. Freeland, T. Birol, M. Greven

TL;DR
This study reveals that hole doping in Y$_{1-x}$Ca$_x$TiO$_3$ causes electronic phase separation into hole-rich and hole-poor regions, leading to a percolative insulator-metal transition characterized by the formation of in-gap states.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence for phase separation and percolation-driven transition in doped Mott insulators using x-ray absorption spectroscopy and theoretical calculations.
Findings
Electronic phase separation into hole-rich and hole-poor regions.
In-gap electronic states increase with doping.
Transition is percolative and first-order in nature.
Abstract
One of the major puzzles in condensed matter physics has been the observation of a Mott-insulating state away from half-filling. The filling-controlled Mott insulator-metal transition, induced via charge-carrier doping, has been extensively researched, but its governing mechanisms have yet to be fully understood. Several theoretical proposals aimed to elucidate the nature of the transition have been put forth, a notable one being phase separation and an associated percolation-induced transition. In the present work, we study the prototypical doped Mott-insulating rare-earth titanate YTiO, in which the insulating state survives up to a large hole concentration of 35%. Single crystals of YCaTiO with , spanning the insulator-metal transition, are grown and investigated. Using x-ray absorption spectroscopy, a powerful technique capable of probing…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
