Visualizing How Electrons Delocalize and Couple to Bosons in a Doped Correlated Insulator
ORAL
Abstract
Most ABO3 transition metal perovskite oxides are insulating due to the strong Coulomb repulsion between electrons at the transition metal (B) and at the oxygen ions. As aliovalent A ions are introduced, the material usually transitions to a metallic state. However, the critical dopant concentration is often large and accompanied by structural changes, obscuring the study of band formation in these materials. In CaMnO3, minute doping induces a sharp transition to a metallic state. This compound thus appears as an ideal platform to explore the interplay between doping, correlations and disorder in perovskite oxides. Here, we use angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy to determine the electronic structure of doped CaMnO3 thin films. We show that doping promotes the formation of several Fermi pockets with dispersive and non-dispersive bands, coexisting with polaronic signatures and quasiparticle mass renormalization signaling coupling to plasmonic excitations. These data shed light on the complex transport response of Ce-doped CaMnO3 and suggest strategies to engineer two-dimensional quantum matter from correlated oxides.
*This work has received funding from the French National Research Agency project ANR-10-LABX-0035, and from the European Research Council grant n° 615759.
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Presenters
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Lorenzo Vistoli
- Unité Mixte de Physique CNRS/Thales