Theoretical and experimental evidence of a site-selective Mott transition in Fe2O3 under pressure
Abstract: We provide experimental and theoretical evidence for a novel type of pressure-induced insulator-metal transition characterized by site-selective delocalization of the electrons. M\"ossbauer spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction and electrical transport measurements on Fe$_2$O$_3$ to 100 GPa, along with dynamical mean-field theory (DFT+DMFT) calculations, reveal this site-selective Mott transition between 50 and 68 GPa, such that the metallization can be described by ($\rm{VI}$Fe${3+\rm{HS}}$)$_2$O$_3$ [$R\bar{3}c$ structure] $\overrightarrow{\tiny\rm{50~GPa}}$ ($\rm{VIII}$Fe${3+\rm{HS~VI}}$Fe$\rm{M}$)O$_3$ [$P2_1/n$ structure] $\overrightarrow{\tiny\rm{68~GPa}}$ ($\rm{VI}$Fe$\rm{M}$)$_2$O$_3$ [$Aba2$ structure]. Within the $P2_1/n$ crystal structure, characterized by two distinct coordination sites (VI and VIII), we observe equal abundances of ferric ions (Fe${3+}$) and ions having delocalized electrons (Fe$\rm{M}$), and only at higher pressures is a fully metallic $Aba2$ structure obtained, all at room temperature. The transition is characterized by delocalization/metallization of the $3d$ electrons on half the Fe sites, with a site-dependent collapse of local moments. Above $\sim$50 GPa, Fe$_2$O$_3$ is a strongly correlated metal with reduced electron mobility (large band renormalizations) of m*/m$\sim$4 and 6 near the Fermi level. Upon decompression, we observe a site-selective (metallic) to conventional Mott insulator phase transition ($\rm{VIII}$Fe${3+\rm{HS~VI}}$Fe$\rm{M}$)O$_3$ $\overrightarrow{\tiny\rm{50~GPa}}$ ($\rm{VIII}$Fe${3+\rm{HS~VI}}$Fe${3+ \rm{HS}}$)O$_3$ within the same $P2_1/n$ structure, indicating a decoupling of the electronic and lattice degrees of freedom, characteristic of a true Mott transition. Our results show that the interplay of electronic correlations and lattice may result in rather complex behavior of the electronic structure and magnetic state.
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