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Mott insulating behavior is induced by strong electron correlations and can lead to exotic states of matter such as unconventional superconductivity and quantum spin liquids. The Crommie group is exploring this behavior in several different 2D systems.
2D Mott insulators emerge when the Coulomb interaction (U) exceeds the bandwidth (W) in partially-filled band systems that can be described by 2D Hubbard-like models.1 Bulk 1T-TaS2 and the surface of bulk 1T-TaSe2 are layered transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) that have long been known to host unusual insulating phases in the star-of-David charge density wave (CDW) state.2-4 The insulating nature of these bulk systems, however, is complicated by interlayer CDW stacking whose effects on the insulating phase remain controversial. Atomically-thin 1T-TMDs offer an ideal platform to differentiate the contributions of electron correlation and interlayer coupling in quasi-2D materials since single-layer systems can be fully characterized in the absence of interlayer coupling.