Abstract

The metal-insulator transition temperature Tc in VO2 is experimentally shown to be almost the same as a magnetic transition temperature Tm characterized by an abrupt decrease in susceptibility, suggesting the evidence of the same underlying origin for both transitions. The measurement of susceptibility shows that it weakly increases on cooling for temperature range of T > Tm, sharply decreases near Tm and then unusually increases on further cooling. A theoretical approach for such unusual observations in susceptibility near Tm or below is performed by modeling electrons from each two adjacent V4+ ions distributed along V-chains as a two-electron system, which indicates that the spin exchange between electrons could cause a level splitting into a singlet (S = 0) level of lower energy and a triplet (S = 1) level of higher energy. The observed abrupt decrease in susceptibility near Tm is explained to be due to that the sample enters the singlet state in which two electrons from adjacent V4+ ions are paired into dimers in spin antiparallel. By considering paramagnetic contribution of unpaired electrons created by the thermal activation from singlet to triplet levels, an expression for susceptibility is proposed to quantitatively explain the unusual temperature-dependent susceptibility observed at low temperatures. Based on the approach to magnetic features, the observed metal-insulator transition is explained to be due to a transition from high-temperature Pauli paramagnetic metallic state of V4+ions to low-temperature dimerized state of strong electronic localization.

Highlights

  • Vanadium dioxide (VO2) is generally shown to undergo a metal-to-insulator (M-I) transition at a temperature Tc ~ 340 K1,2, which is accompanied by a simultaneous structural distortion from a high-temperature (T) rutile-type tetragonal (R) phase to a low-T monoclinic (M) phase[2,3,4,5]

  • If no spin exchange exists between electrons, the two-electron system is of four-fold degenerate with a same energy E0, while once the spin exchange appears between electrons, the energy level of four-fold degenerate would become splitting into a singlet (S = 0) level and a triplet (S = 1) levels

  • We have shown that the metal-insulator transition in VO2 in origin is closely related to the magnetic transition characterized by an abrupt decrease in susceptibility

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Summary

Introduction

Vanadium dioxide (VO2) is generally shown to undergo a metal-to-insulator (M-I) transition at a temperature Tc ~ 340 K1,2, which is accompanied by a simultaneous structural distortion from a high-temperature (T) rutile-type tetragonal (R) phase to a low-T monoclinic (M) phase[2,3,4,5]. This structural distortion as an important focus in M-I transition has been verified by recent studies[6,7,8]. Are discussed by considering whether the spin exchange exists between electrons from adjacent V4+ ions along V-chain direction or not

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