Electron Doping of Proposed Kagome Quantum Spin Liquid Produces Localized Electrons in Band Gap States but Not Free Electrons
ORAL
Abstract
Cu3ZnX with X=[(OH)6Cl2] or X=[(OH)6BrF] are Kagome Heisenberg antiferromagnets that display some of the expected quantum spin liquid (QSL) fingerprints, creating the hope that electron doping would enable the long sought high-temperature superconductivity. However, successful insertion of electrons does not necessarily mean free electrons with the ensuing shifted Fermi energy. Z. Kelly et al. recently found that insertion of as much 0.6 Li ions per Cu2+ into Cu3Zn[(OH)6Cl2] does not show the expected metallic conductivity. We have used the modern theory of doping to enquire what happens to electrons inserted into such lattices, particularly the possible interplay between local structural disorder and localization tendencies. Using approaches that correct the self-interaction error we find that whereas the d9 electrons of Cu2+ in the undoped Cu3Zn(OH)6BrF are spread over a broad energy range inside the valence band, upon adding an electron, this broad distribution of levels is bunched into a narrow range of highly localized d10 states inside the band gap. This suggests that the Cu-X manifold has an intrinsic tendency to localize added electrons into a polaronic state.
*Work at CU and JHU were funded by DOE-BES- MSE grant DE-FG02-13ER46959 and DE-FG02-08ER46544, respectively.
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Presenters
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Qihang Liu
- Univ of Colorado - Boulder
- University of Colorado