Single-crystalline thin film of an iridium dioxide polymorph Ir2O4 has been
fabricated by the pulsed laser deposition of LixIr2O4 precursor and the
subsequent Li-deintercalation using soft chemistry. Ir2O4 crystallizes in a
spinel (AB2O4) without A cations in the tetrahedral site, which is
isostructural to lambda-MnO2. Ir ions form a pyrochlore sublattice, which is
known to give rise to a strong geometrical frustration. This Ir spinel was
found to be a narrow gap insulator, in remarkable contrast to the metallic
ground state of rutile-type IrO2. We argue that an interplay of strong
spin-orbit coupling and a Coulomb repulsion gives rise to an insulating ground
state as in a layered perovskite Sr2IrO4.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure