Oxygen-vacancy driven electron localization and itinerancy in rutile-based TiO2
Abstract
Oxygen-deficient TiO2 in the rutile structure as well as the Ti3O5 Magn\'eli phase is investigated within the charge self-consistent combination of density functional theory (DFT) with dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT). It is shown that an isolated oxygen vacancy (V O) in titanium dioxide is not sufficient to metallize the system at low temperatures. In a semiconducting phase, an in-gap state is identified at IG -0.75\,eV\, in excellent agreement with experimental data. Band-like impurity levels, resulting from a threefold V O-Ti coordination as well as entangled (t2g,eg) states, become localized due to site-dependent electronic correlations. Charge localization and strong orbital polarization occur in the V O-near Ti ions, which details can be modified by a variation of the correlated subspace. At higher oxygen vacancy concentration, a correlated metal is stabilized in the Magn\'eli phase. A V O-defect rutile structure of identical stoichiometry shows key differences in the orbital-resolved character and the spectral properties. Charge disproportionation is vital in the oxygen-deficient compounds, but obvious metal-insulator transitions driven or sustained by charge order are not identified.
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