posted on 2025-05-07, 11:04authored byXiaobin Zou, Yecheng Zhou, Lishan Liang, Jingying Sun, Fei Tian, Yong Sun, Chengxin Wang
Fundamental principles and material realization of electronic
state
regulation are attracting multidisciplinary interest, where phase
engineering and structural modification offer promising strategies
for identifying suitable material systems. Herein, Bi2O2Te nanowires epitaxially grown along unconventional (013)
planes, with randomly intercalated oxidation of (Te)2– layers, are constructed featuring localized magnetic moments. Anomalous
non-Ohmic magnetotransport manifesting universal conductance fluctuation
reveals the characteristics of a disordered electronic system. Negative
magnetoresistance emerges under arbitrary magnetic field orientations,
with Kondo scattering indicated as the dominant mechanism. As in-plane
transport of Bi2O2Te yields positive magnetoresistance
sensitive to the perpendicular field component, a three-dimensional
tunable magnetotransport including positive/negative magnetoresistance
and an intermediate state is achieved by adjusting the competition
between the two mechanisms. These results position Bi2O2Te as a potential platform for studying the regulation of
electronic states and elucidating the microscopic origin of negative
magnetoresistance in nonmagnetic disordered systems.