Glassy electrons at the first order Mott metal-insulator transition
ORAL
Abstract
The Mott metal-insulator transition remains one of the most scrutinized concepts in condensed matter physics. However, the kinetics of the charge carriers at the transition, involving both orbital and spin degrees of freedom, still remains poorly understood. A perfect platform to distinguish between the role of such competing interactions is strongly correlated oxides offering rich phase diagrams, which we use here to address the electron kinetics at the transition. We show a critical slowing down of electron kinetics at the first order metal to Mott insulator transition in the Ruddlesden Popper oxide Ca3(Ru0.9Ti0.1)2O7 using low-frequency noise in resistance fluctuations. Critical slowing down of the electron kinetics is manifested as an enhancement of noise by an order of magnitude at the transition with a large shift of the spectral weight to lower frequencies. The second spectrum of noise is frequency dependent, indicating the presence of correlated fluctuations which gets suppressed under the application of a magnetic field. Our experiments provide compelling evidence of the formation of a spin-glass phase at the transition in these systems.
*SK acknowledges PMRF, SI and AG acknowledge MeitY for support. ZQM and YW acknowledge support of U.S. NSF through the Penn State 2DCC-MIP under NSF Cooperative Agreement No. DMR-2039351.
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Publication: Glassy electrons at the first order Mott metal-insulator transition (under review, Phys. Rev. Lett.)
Presenters
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SHREYA KUMBHAKAR
- Indian Institute of Science Bangalore
- Indian Institute of Science
- IISc, Bangalore