Event
Seeking to understand the nature of high-temperature superconductivity
(HTSC) in iron-based materials, we discuss a new class of compounds in
which unconventional superconductivity may occur. When first
discovered in 2008, superconductivity in iron-containing materials was
thought to manifest by charge doping materials with metallic normal
states. By 2011, superconductivity was found, surprisingly, to also emerge
from systems showing insulating and pseudo-gapped normal states. Studying
the novel insulators La2O2Fe2OM2 (M=S, Se), called iron oxychalcogenides (FeOCh), we found that different electron correlation features can
be enhanced or diminished as observed in X-ray spectroscopic data. We report the presence of exotic
electronic properties: the new insulators possess sizable local Coulomb correlation and
inter-orbtial hybridization similar to Mott and Kondo insulators. These
materials have been named Mott-Kondo Insulators. We have shown that their
non-magnetically ordered state could be made more metallic by exchanging
sulfur with selenium indicating that further metallic enhancement might
be achieved through carrier doping or external pressure. We predict that
the Mott-Kondo Insulators should be tunable into the unconventional superconducting
state.