Abstract

An electronic solid with itinerant carriers and localized magnetic moments represents a paradigmatic strongly correlated system. The electrical transport properties associated with the itinerant carriers, as they scatter off these local moments, have been scrutinized across a number of materials. Here, we analyze the transport characteristics associated with ultraclean PdCrO[Formula: see text]-a quasi-two-dimensional material consisting of alternating layers of itinerant Pd-electrons and Mott-insulating CrO[Formula: see text] layers-which shows a pronounced regime of T-linear resistivity over a wide range of intermediate temperatures. By contrasting these observations to the transport properties in a closely related material PdCoO[Formula: see text], where the CoO[Formula: see text] layers are band-insulators, we can rule out the traditional electron-phonon interactions as being responsible for this interesting regime. We propose a previously ignored electron-magneto-elastic interaction between the Pd-electrons, the Cr local moments and an out-of-plane phonon as the main scattering mechanism that leads to the significant enhancement of resistivity and a T-linear regime in PdCrO[Formula: see text] at temperatures far in excess of the magnetic ordering temperature. We suggest a number of future experiments to confirm this picture in PdCrO[Formula: see text] as well as other layered metallic/Mott-insulating materials.

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