Ligand Hole Driven Metal–Insulator Transition Exemplified in a Layered Transition Metal Oxide

Abstract

The interplay of cooperative Jahn–Teller (JT) distortions and charge-disproportionation (CD) with a strong electronic correlation in transition metal oxides leads to structural symmetry breaking. Both JT and CD often manifest in the form of significant modifications in electronic and structural properties such as band splitting, metal–insulator transitions (MIT), and enhanced electron lattice interactions. Notably, the charge-disproportionation is a key electronic feature that drives the MIT. We demonstrate and quantify it using first-principles calculations combining density-functional theory, dynamical mean-field theory, and spin–lattice Monte Carlo simulations. Taking Ca2FeMnO6 as a prototypical example of a correlated oxide, our ab initio study shows that MIT in Ca2FeMnO6 arises from the partial localization of oxygen ligand holes at alternate Fe sites that control both charge and magnetic ordering. Interestingly, the band gap was found to be fundamentally controlled by the strength of the charge-transfer energy and not by the Mott–Hubbard interactions. The novel physics and insights presented in this work reveal promising routes for tuning the electronic functionality in transition-metal oxides

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Last time updated on 01/07/2025

This paper was published in Discovery Research Portal.

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