4.3 Article

Magnetic-Field-Induced Insulator Metal Transition of W-doped VO2 Observed by Electromagnetic Flux Compression at ISSP

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE PHYSICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN
Volume 91, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

PHYSICAL SOC JAPAN
DOI: 10.7566/JPSJ.91.101008

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The metal-insulator transition in condensed-matter physics has been a subject of great interest, and recent research has discovered a magnetic-field-induced insulator-metal transition in W-doped vanadium dioxide. This article summarizes experimental findings of the field-induced transition in V1-xWxO2, including new results for pure VO2, and discusses the possible mechanism of the phase transition. The technical details required for conducting experiments using electromagnetic flux compression are also introduced, and promising research themes in ultrahigh magnetic fields up to 1000 T are proposed as future prospects.
The metal???insulator transition is one of the most fascinating phenomena in condensed-matter physics and has attracted much attention from researchers. It has recently been discovered that W-doped vanadium dioxide (V1???xWxO2) exhibits a magnetic-field-induced insulator???metal transition in a very high magnetic field of 500 T. Electromagnetic flux compression (EMFC) is essential for experiments involving this kind of ultrahigh magnetic field. Experimental findings regarding the field-induced insulator???metal transition in V1???xWxO2 are summarized including new experimental results for pure VO2, and a possible mechanism of the phase transition is discussed. The technical details required for EMFC experiments are also introduced. Promising research themes in ultrahigh magnetic fields of up to 1000 T are proposed as future prospects for ultrahigh magnetic field research at the Institute for Solid State Physics (ISSP).

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