Abstract
The controllability over strongly correlated electronic states promises unique electronic devices. A recent example is an optically induced ultrafast switching device based on the transition between the correlated Mott insulating state and a metallic state of a transition metal dichalcogenide 1T-TaS2. However, the electronic switching has been challenging and the nature of the transition has been veiled. Here we demonstrate the nanoscale electronic manipulation of the Mott state of 1T-TaS2. The voltage pulse from a scanning tunnelling microscope switches the insulating phase locally into a metallic phase with irregularly textured domain walls in the charge density wave order inherent to this Mott state. The metallic state is revealed as a correlated phase, which is induced by the moderate reduction of electron correlation due to the charge density wave decoherence.
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Introduction
The electron motion as represented by the bandwidth W is strongly limited by the on-site Coulomb repulsion U and a Mott insulating state develops by the localization of electrons near the Fermi energy (EF) when U/W exceeds a critical value1,2,3,4. In the Mott insulator 1T-TaS2, a unique correlated insulating state is brought on by the spontaneous formation of the charge density wave (CDW) order, which substantially reduces (increases) the bandwidth W (U/W) at EF (refs 5, 6). Thus, the Mott phase becomes metallic upon increasing the temperature above Tc∼220 K (ref. 7), where the CDW order melts into small domains textured by nearly commensurate domain wall networks8. The metallic phase with the textured CDW can be generated not only by thermal excitation but also by chemical doping9,10,11, photoexcitation12,13, pressure14, carrier injection15,16 and the reduction of thickness17,18.
While these studies demonstrate the macroscopic controllability of the correlated Mott insulating phase by the CDW order, the origin of the excited metallic phase, the textured CDW phase, has been elusive. The metallicity was attributed to the metallic domain wall themselves14, the metallization of the Mott-CDW domains due to the screening by free carriers of domain walls9, or the change of the interlayer stacking order19. However, there has been no experimental verification of these scenarios and no direct information on the electronic structure of the domain wall. The nature of the metallic phase is also in the centre of the current debate on the mechanism of superconductivity emerging at low temperatures10,11,14,20.
In the present study, we have succeeded in the nanoscale manipulation of the metal–insulator transition of the Mott insulating phase of 1T-TaS2. The metallic domains can reversibly be formed and erased with an atomically abrupt phase boundary by applying voltage pulse from a scanning tunnelling microscope (STM) tip. The spectroscopic measurements with atomic resolution rule out the existence of substantial free carriers along domain walls and unveil the correlated nature of the metallic phase.
Result
Phase manipulations of the charge ordered Mott insulator
Figure 1a illustrates the CdI2-type crystal structure of 1T-TaS2 with Ta atoms octahedrally coordinated by S atoms. A unit layer consists of one Ta layer sandwiched between two S layers. Within the insulating phase at low temperature, 1T-TaS2 develops a long-range ordered CDW accompanied with the David-star distortion; 12 Ta atoms shrink towards the centre Ta atom and S layers swell up along the c axis. Such a deformation forms a commensurate triangular superlattice (aCDW∼12.1 Å; Fig. 1b)21. The lattice deformation brings about the charge localization at the centre of David-star, which is clearly resolved in the STM image of the CDW phase (Fig. 1c)22.
The manipulation of the Mott-CDW phase was realized by applying a positive voltage pulse (Vs≥+2.0 V and Δt=100 ms) within a typical STM set-up at T=4.3 K (Fig. 1c; Methods). A pulse creates a textured CDW domain of a few tens of nanometres with an irregular domain wall network inside. The additional pulse nearby (solid arrows in Fig. 1d,f) can also reduce the size of a pre-existing textured CDW domain (dashed arrows in Fig. 1e,g). The higher a pulse voltage is, the bigger textured domain is formed. At this temperature, the large textured CDW domains are rather stable but the smaller one can be gradually reduced by the STM imaging with a moderate tunnelling current (Fig. 1h–k). This indicates the metastability of the textured CDW phase and that we can reproducibly induce a textured CDW domain at a desired position and erase it (Supplementary Fig. 1).
It has been shown that the Mott-CDW phase can be macroscopically turned into the metallic phase with textured CDW by thermal excitation7 or carrier doping15,16,17,18. They commonly introduced the crucial role of extra carriers and, in particular, the temperature-dependent Hall measurement23 and the electric-field-effect study16 indicated the direct role of hole carriers over the critical density in creating domain walls. In the present case, only a positive V-pulse is active, where the local hole concentration under the STM tip is enhanced24. This is consistent with the hole-carrier mechanism, while we cannot completely exclude the local heating effect and the transient electron carrier injection by the tunnelling current.
Electronic structure of the domain walls
The domain walls themselves are well resolved in the STM images (Fig. 2). The phase of the CDW changes abruptly across the domain walls as shown in Fig. 2d. They form disordered networks in contrast to the hexagonally ordered domain walls of the nearly commensurate CDW phase8,25. This difference is apparently related to the quenched nature of the present textured CDW domains, being far away from the thermal equilibrium. The present case would be closer to the metallic phase induced by the laser excitation from the low temperature phase. This work called the metallic phase a hidden, thermodynamically unreachable, order state and assumed a triangular lattice of the domain walls without any microscopic information13.
Most of the previous studies considered the conducting channel along a domain wall as the origin of the metallic property9,14. Nevertheless, there has been a lack of direct spectroscopic information on domain walls. The present study rules out a dominating metallic nature of the domain wall denying most of the previous metallization scenarios for various textured CDW phases. In the STM image, the contrast of domain walls is suppressed close to EF (Fig. 2b) and enhanced at Vs=+0.20 V (Fig. 2c) with their own reconstruction different from a David-star. This indicates that a domain wall has little density of states near EF with its own electronic state at +0.20 eV, which is more directly verified by the spatially resolved dI/dV(r, V) curves (green curves in Fig. 3d,e). In addition, as shown in Fig. 2d, the common domain walls consist of even number (12+12) Ta atoms so that the number of electrons within the domain wall is even. Thus, the metallic character of the domain wall26 is not expected a priori. This point will be detailed elsewhere.
Electronic structure of the textured CDW domain
In stark contrast, the textured CDW domain has a metallic characteristic. We took the dI/dV(r, V) curves crossing a boundary between a textured and a ordered CDW domain (Fig. 3). In the ordered CDW region, two prominent peaks at −0.19 and +0.23 eV are resolved, which correspond to the lower and upper Hubbard bands, respectively (Fig. 3b and the bottom curve in Fig. 3e). They have a bandwidth of ∼100 meV and constitute the Mott gap of ∼0.42 eV. Beyond the Mott gap, there is additional band splitting away from EF around −0.30 eV. This bandgap is known to come from the CDW formation6 and the peak at −0.42 eV is ascribed to the top of the valence subbands9,27,28,29. This band splitting makes the necessary condition for the Mott insulating state, that is, a narrow band at EF.
Within the textured CDW domain, the tunnelling spectra unambiguously indicate finite density of states around EF. The zero-bias conductance profile (dI/dV(r, 0)) in Fig. 3c distinguishes the metallic and insulating regions sharply. Note that it is peaked on the CDW maxima within the textured CDW domain. They originate from a pronounced spectral feature close to EF (white arrows in Fig. 3b, the grey regions in Fig. 3d and the black arrow in Fig. 3e). In addition, the tunnelling spectra in the textured CDW phase exhibit broad features centred at −0.12 and +0.14 eV. They are similar to the Hubbard states in the Mott-CDW phase but shifted slightly towards EF with a substantial reduction of the intensity and a noticeable broadening (1.3–1.6 times larger than the bandwidth of Hubbard states). On the other hand, the top of the valence subband is also shifted substantially towards EF (orange arrows in Fig. 3e).
Calculations of the bandwidth-controlled Mott transition
The spectral characteristics of the textured CDW phase within the Mott gap can be directly related to a breakdown process of the Mott insulating state. The present system has been effectively described by a one-band Hubbard model on a triangular lattice at half filling. Our theoretical calculations based on spin-liquid physics30 (Methods) reveals a metal–insulator transition as a function of U/t (t, an intersite hopping integral proportional to W), which captures the major experimental findings; the weakening and broadening of the Hubbard states together with the reduction of the Mott gap and the appearance of the sharp peak near EF (Fig. 3d). This peak was assigned as the coherent resonance of correlated electrons in the previous dynamic mean field theory calculations31. These theories assure that the present textured CDW phase is a correlated metallic state close to the critical regime of the Mott transition (U/t∼1.4 in Fig. 3f and Supplementary Fig. 2). Deviating marginally from the theory, the coherent peak assigned in the experiment has an asymmetric shape and is located slightly below EF. The previous STS results of a correlated metal showed very consistent spectra32. While we attribute those deviations to the interference effect caused by the tunnelling current33,34,35, a further study on the spectral details is desirable.
Discussion
What remains to be explained is the origin of the reduced correlation U/t to drive the transition. The screening by free carriers of domain walls9 is not likely as shown by the lack of EF weight in the dI/dV data. Instead, we note that the long-range CDW order is lost within the textured CDW domain. The reduced CDW order would naturally decrease the CDW band splitting, which is clearly evidenced by the substantial energy shift of the valence subband top (orange arrows in Fig. 3e). The effect of the reduced CDW bandgap on the Mott state can be traced by calculating the evolution of the bandwidth at EF. Our calculations unambiguously show that the width of the subband straddling the Fermi level at U=0 is linearly increased by the decrease of the CDW order parameter (Supplementary Fig. 3). The bandwidth increase of the Hubbard bands is evident in the experiment (Fig. 3). This is close to the concept of the bandwidth-controlled Mott transition discussed previously14,36. In addition, the domain walls can act as the disorder potential, which can also drive the metallization of a Mott insulator. The spatial fluctuation of the spectra within the textured CDW domain (Fig. 3d) seems to be related to the disorder37. However, this case yields broad spectral features with a symmetric dip at EF (refs 38, 39), which is clearly distinguished from the sharp spectral feature close to EF of the present case. On the other hand, the disorder is also known to reduce the correlation energy U in general37,39. This type of the disorder contribution is not excluded. Thus, we conclude that the reduced CDW order induces the increased bandwidth W and at the same time the reduced U, which drives the Mott-CDW state into the critical regime of a correlated metallic state.
While the STM images we showed so far only deal with the lateral CDW ordering, we also notice that the vertical CDW stacking order has a crucial impact on this transition. Figure 4 shows that a relatively large domain within the metallic domain has extra but weak domain walls inside (black arrows in Fig. 4a), which is assigned as the domain wall existing in the sublayer(s). The low-bias images and the spectroscopy data indicate clearly that this domain harbours insulating subdomains as defined by the sublayer domain walls. One can straightforwardly deduce that these subdomains correspond to different interlayer stacking of the CDW; the interlayer CDW stacking order is lost by the formation of the irregular domain wall networks in each layer except for those metallic subdomains. This suggests that not only the intralayer but also interlayer CDW order has to be taken into account to explain the reduced electron correlation for the Mott transition26. The importance of the interlayer CDW stacking order was recently discussed, while the direct experimental information has been lacking19.
The present case of 1T-TaS2 is an exceptional example of the nanoscale control over strongly correlated electronic states. We can find only one case for the nanoscale manipulation of a Mott insulator in GaTa3Se8 (ref. 40). In this case, the strong electric-field-induced deformation of the lattice occurs and the transition is close to the avalanche dielectric breakdown41. In the present system, the transition is largely electronic and the resulting metallic state is a novel correlated state near the Mott criticality. The uniqueness of the present system lies on the intercoupled nature of the Mott state with the CDW order, which provides the extra tunability of the Mott state by a distinct order. The ultrafast switching capability of the present system13,15,16 in combination with the nanoscale controllability is expected to provide a unprecedented novel device platform based on correlated electronic systems.
Methods
Preparation of single crystal 1T-TaS2
The single crystal 1T-TaS2 were grown by iodine vapour transport method in the evacuated quartz tube. Before growth of the sample, the powder 1T-TaS2 was sintered for 48 h at 750 °C. We repeated this process two times to get poly crystals. To get high-quality sample, the seeds were slowly transported by iodine at 900–970 °C for 2 weeks. The tube was rapidly cooled down to room temperature in the air due to the metastability of the 1T phase.
STM and STS measurements
The STM and STS measurements have been performed with a commercial STM (SPECS) in ultra high vacuum at T=4.3 K. The STM tips were prepared by mechanically sharpened Pt–Ir wires. All of STM images are acquired with the constant current mode with bias voltage Vs applied to the sample. When the positive V-pulses are applied to the sample with a fixed duration of t=100 ms and a varying amplitude, the feedback loop is opened with scanning condition (Vs=−1.20 V and It=100 pA). We can get the small texture CDW domain below Vp∼+2.0 V and a larger textured CDW phase with increasing amplitude. The dI/dV(V) curves are recorded using a lock-in technique with voltage modulation Vm=10 mV and frequency f=1 kHz.
Theoretical calculations
The CDW-Mott state in 1T-TaS2 can be described by an effective one-band Hubbard model on the triangular lattice at half filling
where ci,σ is an electron annihilation operator with spin σ at site i, identified with each centre of David-star. Hinted from the observation that the coherent peak emerges in the textured CDW state, we take the U(1) slave-rotor representation for possible spin-liquid physics at least in the intermediate temperature regime42. It is straightforward to perform the saddle-point analysis based on an ansatz for spin-liquid physics30, which leads us to confirm the existence of a metal–insulator transition from a spin-liquid-type Mott insulating state to a correlated metallic phase at critical value of U/t (details shown in Supplementary Note 1).
Additional information
How to cite this article: Cho, D. et al. Nanoscale manipulation of the Mott insulating state coupled to charge order in 1T-TaS2. Nat. Commun. 7:10453 doi: 10.1038/ncomms10453 (2016).
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Institute for Basic Science (Grant No. IBS-R014-D1). Y.-H.C. and S.-W.C. are partially supported by the Max Planck POSTECH/KOREA Research Initiative Program (Grant No. 2011-0031558) through NRF of Korea funded by MEST. S.-W.C. is also supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundations EPiQS Initiative through Grant GBMF4413 to the Rutgers Center for Emergent Materials.
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D.C. and H.W.Y. conceived the research idea and plan. D.C. performed the STM experiments. Y.-H.C. and S.-W.C. grew the single crystals. S.C. and K.-S.K. conducted the model calculations. S.-H.L. performed the DFT calculations. D.C. and H.W.Y. prepared the manuscript with the comments of all other authors.
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Supplementary Figures 1-3, Supplementary Note 1 and Supplementary References (PDF 1621 kb)
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Cho, D., Cheon, S., Kim, KS. et al. Nanoscale manipulation of the Mott insulating state coupled to charge order in 1T-TaS2. Nat Commun 7, 10453 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms10453
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms10453
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