| Literature DB >> 27517783 |
M Nakayama1, Takeshi Kondo1, Z Tian1, J J Ishikawa1, M Halim1, C Bareille1, W Malaeb1,2, K Kuroda1, T Tomita1, S Ideta3, K Tanaka3, M Matsunami4, S Kimura5, N Inami6, K Ono6, H Kumigashira6, L Balents7, S Nakatsuji1,8, S Shin1.
Abstract
We present an angle-resolved photoemission study of the electronic structure of the three-dimensional pyrochlore iridate Nd_{2}Ir_{2}O_{7} through its magnetic metal-insulator transition. Our data reveal that metallic Nd_{2}Ir_{2}O_{7} has a quadratic band, touching the Fermi level at the Γ point, similar to that of Pr_{2}Ir_{2}O_{7}. The Fermi node state is, therefore, a common feature of the metallic phase of the pyrochlore iridates. Upon cooling below the transition temperature, this compound exhibits a gap opening with an energy shift of quasiparticle peaks like a band gap insulator. The quasiparticle peaks are strongly suppressed, however, with further decrease of temperature, and eventually vanish at the lowest temperature, leaving a nondispersive flat band lacking long-lived electrons. We thereby identify a remarkable crossover from Slater to Mott insulators with decreasing temperature. These observations explain the puzzling absence of Weyl points in this material, despite its proximity to the zero temperature metal-insulator transition.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27517783 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.117.056403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161