Two-dimensional materials can be strongly influenced by their surroundings. A dielectric environment screens and reduces the Coulomb interaction between electrons in the two-dimensional material. Since in Mott materials the Coulomb interaction is responsible for the insulating state, manipulating the dielectric screening provides direct control over Mottness. Our many-body calculations reveal the spectroscopic fingerprints of such Coulomb engineering: we demonstrate eV-scale changes to the position of the Hubbard bands and show a Coulomb engineered insulator-to-metal transition. Based on our proof-of-principle calculations, we discuss the (feasible) conditions under which our scenario of Coulomb engineering of Mott materials can be realized experimentally.
%0 Journal Article
%1 vanloon2023coulomb
%A van Loon, Erik G. C. P.
%A Schüler, Malte
%A Springer, Daniel
%A Sangiovanni, Giorgio
%A Tomczak, Jan M.
%A Wehling, Tim O.
%D 2023
%J NPJ 2D Mater. Appl.
%K a b
%N 1
%P 47--
%R 10.1038/s41699-023-00408-x
%T Coulomb engineering of two-dimensional Mott materials
%U https://doi.org/10.1038/s41699-023-00408-x
%V 7
%X Two-dimensional materials can be strongly influenced by their surroundings. A dielectric environment screens and reduces the Coulomb interaction between electrons in the two-dimensional material. Since in Mott materials the Coulomb interaction is responsible for the insulating state, manipulating the dielectric screening provides direct control over Mottness. Our many-body calculations reveal the spectroscopic fingerprints of such Coulomb engineering: we demonstrate eV-scale changes to the position of the Hubbard bands and show a Coulomb engineered insulator-to-metal transition. Based on our proof-of-principle calculations, we discuss the (feasible) conditions under which our scenario of Coulomb engineering of Mott materials can be realized experimentally.
@article{vanloon2023coulomb,
abstract = {Two-dimensional materials can be strongly influenced by their surroundings. A dielectric environment screens and reduces the Coulomb interaction between electrons in the two-dimensional material. Since in Mott materials the Coulomb interaction is responsible for the insulating state, manipulating the dielectric screening provides direct control over Mottness. Our many-body calculations reveal the spectroscopic fingerprints of such Coulomb engineering: we demonstrate eV-scale changes to the position of the Hubbard bands and show a Coulomb engineered insulator-to-metal transition. Based on our proof-of-principle calculations, we discuss the (feasible) conditions under which our scenario of Coulomb engineering of Mott materials can be realized experimentally.},
added-at = {2023-11-22T18:24:43.000+0100},
author = {van Loon, Erik G. C. P. and Schüler, Malte and Springer, Daniel and Sangiovanni, Giorgio and Tomczak, Jan M. and Wehling, Tim O.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/289776bd6e9a80e06d7cb720a3b885c28/ctqmat},
day = 06,
doi = {10.1038/s41699-023-00408-x},
interhash = {f978712db51188e3b5762f3272e25e52},
intrahash = {89776bd6e9a80e06d7cb720a3b885c28},
issn = {23977132},
journal = {NPJ 2D Mater. Appl.},
keywords = {a b},
month = {07},
number = 1,
pages = {47--},
refid = {van Loon2023},
timestamp = {2023-11-22T18:24:43.000+0100},
title = {Coulomb engineering of two-dimensional Mott materials},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1038/s41699-023-00408-x},
volume = 7,
year = 2023
}