Metallic states in Pb10(PO4)6O induced by the Cu/O-insertions and carrier doping
Abstract
The reports of room-temperature superconductivity in Cu-doped Pb-apatite draw intense interests and debates. Herein, based on the density functional theory, we show that the Cu-insertion in Pb-apatite is thermodynamically stable and further carrier doping can convert the system CuPb10(PO4)6O into metal. The electric conduction is mainly along the one-dimensional (1D) Cu-O chains in the c-axis (out-of-plane). The calculated conductance along the c-axis is larger than the in-plane ones by 2 magnitude orders, indicating the 1D conduction behavior. Moreover, the 1D Cu-O chain is an anti-ferromagnetic Mott insulator at zero-doping point due to the super-exchange. Further electron/hole-doping will erase the anti-ferromagnetism. Therefore, the Cu-inserted system CuPb10(PO4)6O show transport and magnetic features similar to the cuprate superconductors. On the other hand, the O-insertion can also induce the metallic states, in which the conductance along the out-of-plane direction is higher than the in-plane direction by 6-folds. Our results display the metallization of Pb10(PO4)6O via Cu/O-insertions, and suggesting the electric conductions along the c-axis might dominate the transport behaviors.
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