Nearly-free electrons in a 5d delafossite oxide metal

Abstract

Understanding the role of electron correlations in strong spin-orbit transition-metal oxides is key to the realisation of numerous exotic phases including spin-orbit assisted Mott insulators, correlated topological solids, and prospective new high-temperature superconductors. To date, most attention has been focussed on the 5d iridium-based oxides. Here, we instead consider the Pt-based delafossite oxide PtCoO2. Our transport measurements, performed on single-crystal samples etched to well-defined geometries using focussed ion-beam techniques, yield a room-temperature resistivity of only 2.1~μ, establishing PtCoO2 as the most conductive oxide known. From angle-resolved photoemission and density-functional theory, we show that the underlying Fermi surface is a single cylinder of nearly hexagonal cross-section, with very weak dispersion along kz. Despite being predominantly composed of d-orbital character, the conduction band is remarkably steep, with an average effective mass of only 1.14me. Moreover, the sharp spectral features observed in photoemission remain well-defined with little additional broadening for over 500~meV below EF, pointing to suppressed electron-electron scattering. Together, our findings establish PtCoO2 as a model nearly-free electron system in a 5d delafossite transition-metal oxide.

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