Mottness versus unit-cell doubling as the driver of the insulating state in 1T-TaS2

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Abstract

If a material with an odd number of electrons per unit-cell is insulating, Mott localisation may be invoked as an explanation. This is widely accepted for the layered compound 1T-TaS2, which has a low-temperature insulating phase comprising charge order clusters with 13 unpaired orbitals each. But if the stacking of layers doubles the unit-cell to include an even number of orbitals, the nature of the insulating state is ambiguous. Here, scanning tunnelling microscopy reveals two distinct terminations of the charge order in 1T-TaS2, the sign of such a double-layer stacking pattern. However, spectroscopy at both terminations allows us to disentangle unit-cell doubling effects and determine that Mott localisation alone can drive gap formation. We also observe the collapse of Mottness at an extrinsically re-stacked termination, demonstrating that the microscopic mechanism of insulator-metal transitions lies in degrees of freedom of inter-layer stacking.

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Butler, C. J., Yoshida, M., Hanaguri, T., & Iwasa, Y. (2020). Mottness versus unit-cell doubling as the driver of the insulating state in 1T-TaS2. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16132-9

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