Doping a Bad Metal: Origin of Suppression of Metal-Insulator Transition in Non-Stoichiometric VO2
Abstract
Rutile (R) phase VO2 is a quintessential example of a strongly correlated bad-metal, which undergoes a metal-insulator transition (MIT) concomitant with a structural transition to a V-V dimerized monoclinic phase below TMIT 340K. It has been experimentally shown that one can control this transition by doping VO2. In particular, doping with oxygen vacancies (VO) has been shown to completely suppress this MIT without any structural transition. We explain this suppression by elucidating the influence of oxygen-vacancies on the electronic-structure of the metallic R phase VO2, explicitly treating strong electron-electron correlations using dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) as well as diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) flavor of quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) techniques. We show that VO's tend to change the V-3d filling away from its nominal half-filled value, with the egπ orbitals competing with the otherwise dominant a1g orbital. Loss of this near orbital polarization of the a1g orbital is associated with a weakening of electron correlations, especially along the V-V dimerization direction. This removes a charge-density wave (CDW) instability along this direction above a critical doping concentration, which further suppresses the metal-insulator transition. Our study also suggests that the MIT is predominantly driven by a correlation-induced CDW instability along the V-V dimerization direction.
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