Developing Structure-Property Relations in Metal-Insulator Transition Materials
ORAL
Abstract
Materials which undergo a metal-insulator transition- a rapid change in resistivity upon temperature, pressure, or composition- have potential for the next generation of electronic switching devices. The underlying mechanisms which drive metal-insulator transitions are of interest both fundamentally in the field of condensed-matter physics and practically for the design of high-performance electronic materials. We develop a link between crystal structure and macroscopic electronic properties to realize new metal-insulator transition materials. We start by examining the AB4Q8 defect spinel system, where A is Al, Ga, Ge, B is Ti, V, Nb, Mo, Ta, and Q is S/Se. These materials, with molecular-orbital-like clusters, start at a cubic F-43m structure at room temperature and then distort to R3m or Imm2 at low temperatures.1 Detailed analysis of the local structure, through pair-distribution function analysis, and the average structure, through high-resolution diffraction, can provide insights into subtle links between structure and electronic behavior.
Reference:
1) D. Johrendt, Z. Anorg. Allg. Chem. 624 (1998) 952
Reference:
1) D. Johrendt, Z. Anorg. Allg. Chem. 624 (1998) 952
*This research was supported by NSF under DMREF Award 1729489. Use of the Shared Experimental Facilities of the MRSEC at UCSB (MRSEC NSF DMR 1720256) is gratefully acknowledged.
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Presenters
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Emily Schueller
- Materials, Univ of California - Santa Barbara