Unveiling the critical role of interfacial strain in adjusting electronic phase transitions in correlated vanadium dioxide
Xuanchi Zhou, Xiaohui Yao, Xiaomei Qiao

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how interfacial strain can be used to precisely control the electronic phase transitions in VO2, enabling tunable insulator-metal transitions for advanced device applications.
Contribution
It reveals the critical role of interfacial strain in modulating bandwidth and band-filling, offering a new approach to tailor electronic states in correlated oxides.
Findings
Strain-mediated bandwidth control enables tunable IMT in VO2.
Defect dynamics influence electronic phase transitions via oxygen vacancies.
Interfacial strain unifies bandwidth and band-filling control paradigms.
Abstract
Thermally activated abrupt switching between localized and itinerant electronic states during the insulator-metal transition (IMT) in correlated oxide systems serves as a powerful platform for exploring exotic physical phenomena and device functionality. One ongoing focal challenge lies in the realization of the broadly tunable IMT property in correlated system, to satisfy the demands of practical applications across diverse environments. Here, we unveil the overwhelming advantage associated with interfacial strain in bridging the bandwidth and band-filling control over the IMT property of VO2. Tailoring the orbital overlapping through strain-mediated bandwidth control enables a widely tunable thermally-driven IMT property in VO2. Benefiting from adjustable defect dynamics, filling-controlled Mott phase modulations from electron-localized t2g1eg0 state to electron-itinerant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTransition Metal Oxide Nanomaterials · Advanced Memory and Neural Computing · Copper-based nanomaterials and applications
