Abstract

The two orbital Hubbard model, with the electrons additionally coupled to a complex magnetic background, arises in the pyrochlore molybdates. The background involves local moments Hund's coupled to the electrons, driving double exchange ferromagnetism, and antiferromagnetic (AF) tendency arising from competing superexchange. The key scales include the Hubbard repulsion and the superexchange, both of which can be tuned in these materials. They control the phase transition from a ferromagnetic metal to a spin-glass metal and then to a spin-glass (Mott) insulator. We provide a comprehensive description of the ground state of this model using an unrestricted Hartree-Fock scheme implemented via a simulated annealing procedure and establish the metal-insulator transition line for varying Hubbard interaction and superexchange. The electrons see an effective disorder, due to orbital frustration, already in the ferromagnetic phase. The disorder is further enhanced by antiferromagnetic coupling and the resulting magnetic disorder. As a result, increasing AF coupling shifts the metal-insulator transition to lower Hubbard interaction and gives it an additional ``Anderson'' character. We provide detailed results on the magnetic and orbital correlations, the density of states, and the optical conductivity.

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