2,218 research outputs found
Charge dynamics in thermally and doping induced insulator-metal transitions of (Ti1-xVx)2O3
Charge dynamics of (Ti1-xVx)2O3 with x=0-0.06 has been investigated by
measurements of charge transport and optical conductivity spectra in a wide
temperature range of 2-600K with the focus on the thermally and doping induced
insulator-metal transitions (IMTs). The optical conductivity peaks for the
interband transitions in the 3d t2g manifold are observed in the both
insulating and metallic states, while their large variation (by ~0.4 eV) with
change of temperature and doping level scales with that of the Ti-Ti dimer bond
length, indicating the weakened singlet bond in the course of IMTs. The
thermally and V-doping induced IMTs are driven with the increase in carrier
density by band-crossing and hole-doping, respectively, in contrast to the
canonical IMT of correlated oxides accompanied by the whole collapse of the
Mott gap.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Coexistence of long-ranged charge and orbital order and spin-glass state in single-layered manganites with weak quenched disorder
The relationship between orbital and spin degrees of freedom in the
single-crystals of the hole-doped PrCaMnO, 0.3
0.7, has been investigated by means of ac-magnetometry and charge
transport. Even though there is no cation ordering on the -site, the
quenched disorder is extremely weak in this system due to the very similar
ionic size of Pr and Ca. A clear asymmetric response of the
system to the under- (respective over-) hole doping was observed. The
long-ranged charge-orbital order established for half doping (=0.5) subsists
in the over-doping case ( 0.5), albeit rearranged to accommodate the
extra holes introduced in the structure. The charge-orbital order is however
destabilized by the presence of extra localized electrons (under-doping,
0.5), leading to its disappearance below =0.35. We show that in an
intermediate under-doped region, with 0.35 0.5, the
``orbital-master spin-slave'' relationship commonly observed in half-doped
manganites does not take place. The long-ranged charge-orbital order is not
accompanied by an antiferromagnetic transition at low temperatures, but by a
frustrated short-ranged magnetic state bringing forth a spin-glass phase. We
discuss in detail the nature and origin of this spin-glass state, which, as in
the half-doped manganites with large quenched disorder, is not related to the
macroscopic phase separation observed in crystals with minor defects or
impurities.Comment: EPL style; 6 pages, 5 figure
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