Universality of pseudogap and emergent order in lightly doped Mott insulators

Surprising observations in the evolution of electronic states in electron-doped iridates provide fresh insight into the melting of the Mott state and might lead to a fuller understanding of corresponding processes in copper-oxide superconductors. It is widely believed that high-temperature supercond...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature physics 2017-01, Vol.13 (1), p.21-25
Hauptverfasser: Battisti, I., Bastiaans, K. M., Fedoseev, V., de la Torre, A., Iliopoulos, N., Tamai, A., Hunter, E. C., Perry, R. S., Zaanen, J., Baumberger, F., Allan, M. P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Surprising observations in the evolution of electronic states in electron-doped iridates provide fresh insight into the melting of the Mott state and might lead to a fuller understanding of corresponding processes in copper-oxide superconductors. It is widely believed that high-temperature superconductivity in the cuprates emerges from doped Mott insulators 1 . When extra carriers are inserted into the parent state, the electrons become mobile but the strong correlations from the Mott state are thought to survive—inhomogeneous electronic order, a mysterious pseudogap and, eventually, superconductivity appear. How the insertion of dopant atoms drives this evolution is not known, nor is whether these phenomena are mere distractions specific to hole-doped cuprates or represent genuine physics of doped Mott insulators. Here we visualize the evolution of the electronic states of (Sr 1− x La x ) 2 IrO 4 , which is an effective spin-1/2 Mott insulator like the cuprates, but is chemically radically different 2 , 3 . Using spectroscopic-imaging scanning tunnelling microscopy (SI-STM), we find that for a doping concentration of x ≈ 5%, an inhomogeneous, phase-separated state emerges, with the nucleation of pseudogap puddles around clusters of dopant atoms. Within these puddles, we observe the same iconic electronic order that is seen in underdoped cuprates 1 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 , 9 . We investigate the genesis of this state and find evidence at low doping for deeply trapped carriers, leading to fully gapped spectra, which abruptly collapse at a threshold of x ≈ 4%. Our results clarify the melting of the Mott state, and establish phase separation and electronic order as generic features of doped Mott insulators.
ISSN:1745-2473
1745-2481
DOI:10.1038/nphys3894