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Phys. Rev. B 81, 035111 (2010) [8 pages]

Metal-insulator transition through a semi-Dirac point in oxide nanostructures: VO2 (001) layers confined within TiO2

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Victor Pardo1,2,* and Warren E. Pickett1,†
1Department of Physics, University of California, Davis, California 95616, USA
2Departamento de Física Aplicada, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, E-15782 Santiago de Compostela, Spain

Received 22 October 2009; revised 21 December 2009; published 20 January 2010

Multilayer (TiO2)m/(VO2)n nanostructures (d1-d0 interfaces with no polar discontinuity) show a metal-insulator transition with respect to the VO2 layer thickness in first-principles calculations. For n≥5 layers, the system becomes metallic, while being insulating for n=1 and 2. The metal-insulator transition occurs through a semi-Dirac point phase for n=3 and 4, in which the Fermi surface is pointlike and the electrons behave as massless along the zone diagonal in k space and as massive fermions along the perpendicular direction. We provide an analysis of the evolution of the electronic structure through this unprecedented insulator-to-metal transition, and identify it as resulting from quantum confinement producing a nonintuitive orbital ordering on the V d1 ions, rather than being a specific oxide interface effect. Spin-orbit coupling does not destroy the semi-Dirac point for the calculated ground state, where the spins are aligned along the rutile c axis, but it does open a substantial gap if the spins lie in the basal plane.

© 2010 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.81.035111
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.81.035111
PACS:
73.20.-r, 75.70.Cn, 79.60.Jv

*victor.pardo@usc.es

wepickett@ucdavis.edu