Terahertz spectroscopy of excitonic insulator candidate Ta<sub>2</sub>NiSe<sub>5</sub>
ORAL
Abstract
An excitonic insulator (EI) is a correlated-electron state in which excitons condense into an insulating ground state in analogy with the condensation of Cooper pairs in a superconductor. A handful of EI candidates have been proposed, but to date experimental verification of such a state has not been conclusively found. Recent transport and specific heat measurements have placed Ta2NiSe5 as the leading EI candidate with Tc = 326 K. Here we present measurements of the terahertz and far-infrared optical conductivity of Ta2NiSe5, which show that at temperatures far below Tc a thermally-activated Drude peak gradually develops inside the optical band gap Egop = 160 meV. At the same time, the gap gradually fills from the high-frequency side with significant spectral weight from above-gap states. This transfer of spectral weight can be interpreted as predominant incoherent hopping of charge carriers along the Ta-Ni chains in the orthorhombic phase and as evidence for near-zero-gap behavior at high temperature. A phonon centered at 4.71 meV in both the a- and c-axis response suggests that the monoclinic distortion associated with the formation of the EI state allows bidirectional ac-plane activity of the B1u/B3u modes.
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Presenters
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Robert Dawson
- Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research