Abstract
Mechanisms of a variety of charge and lattice ordered phases observed in halogen-bridged binuclear metal complexes are theoretically studied by applying the exact diagonalization and strong-coupling expansion methods to one- and two-band extended Peierls–Hubbard models. In R4[Pt2(pop)4I]nH2O [R = Na, K, NH4, (CH3(CH2)7)2NH2, etc., pop = P2O5H22−] containing charged MMX chains, three electronic phases are suggested by experiments. We find that the variation of the electronic phases originates not only from competition between site-diagonal electron–lattice and electron–electron interactions but also from competition between short-range and long-range electron–electron
interactions. On the other hand, in Pt2(RCS2)4I (R = CH3, n-C4H9) containing neutral MMX chains, a site-off-diagonal electron–lattice interaction and the absence of counter ions are found to be crucial to produce the recently found, ordered phase. The optical conductivity
- This article is part of the themed collection: Metal-organic conductors (enriched issue)