Transition-metal oxyhydrides are of considerable current interest due to the unique features of the hydride anion, most notably the absence of valence p orbitals. This feature distinguishes hydrides from all other anions, and gives rise to unprecedented properties in this new class of materials. Here we show via a high-pressure study of anion-ordered strontium vanadium oxyhydride SrVO2H that H- is extraordinarily compressible, and that pressure drives a transition from a Mott insulator to a metal at ~ 50 GPa. Density functional theory suggests that the band gap in the insulating state is reduced by pressure as a result of increased dispersion in the ab-plane due to enhanced Vdπ-Opπ-Vdπ overlap. Remarkably, dispersion along c is limited by the orthogonal Vdπ-H1s-Vdπ arrangement despite the greater c-axis compressibility, suggesting that the hydride anions act as π-blockers. The wider family of oxyhydrides may therefore give access to dimensionally reduced structures with novel electronic properties.
CITATION STYLE
Yamamoto, T., Zeng, D., Kawakami, T., Arcisauskaite, V., Yata, K., Patino, M. A., … Hayward, M. A. (2017). The role of π-blocking hydride ligands in a pressure-induced insulator-to-metal phase transition in SrVO2H. Nature Communications, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-01301-0
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