Speed limit of the insulator-metal transition in magnetite

Authors
  • C.F. Chang
  • T. Kachel
  • M. Beye
  • F. Sorgenfrei
  • C.H. Back
  • B.. Bräuer
  • W.F. Schlotter
  • J.J. Turner
  • O. Krupin
  • M. Doehler
  • D. Zhu
  • M.A. Hossain
  • A.O. Scherz
  • D. Fausti
  • F. Novelli
  • M. Esposito
  • W.S. Lee
  • Y.D. Chuang
  • D.H. Lu
  • R.G. Moore
  • M. Yi
  • M. Trigo
  • P. Kirchmann
  • L. Pathey
  • M. Golden
  • M. Bucholtz
  • P. Metcalf
  • F. Parmigiani
  • W. Wurth
  • A. Föhlisch
  • C. Schüßler-Langeheine
  • H.A. Dürr
Publication date 2013
Journal Nature Materials
Volume | Issue number 12
Pages (from-to) 882-886
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute of Physics (IoP) - Van der Waals-Zeeman Institute (WZI)
Abstract
As the oldest known magnetic material, magnetite (Fe3O4) has fascinated mankind for millennia. As the first oxide in which a relationship between electrical conductivity and fluctuating/localized electronic order was shown1, magnetite represents a model system for understanding correlated oxides in general. Nevertheless, the exact mechanism of the insulator-metal, or Verwey, transition has long remained inaccessible2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. Recently, three-Fe-site lattice distortions called trimerons were identified as the characteristic building blocks of the low-temperature insulating electronically ordered phase9. Here we investigate the Verwey transition with pump-probe X-ray diffraction and optical reflectivity techniques, and show how trimerons become mobile across the insulator-metal transition. We find this to be a two-step process. After an initial 300 fs destruction of individual trimerons, phase separation occurs on a 1.5±0.2 ps timescale to yield residual insulating and metallic regions. This work establishes the speed limit for switching in future oxide electronics10.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/NMAT3718
Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nmat3718
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