Philip W. Phillips

Professor of Physics and Bliss Faculty Scholar

Professor Philip Phillips received his bachelor's degree in chemistry and mathematics from Walla Walla College in 1979 and his Ph.D. in physical chemistry from the University of Washington in 1982. After a Miller Fellowship at Berkeley, he joined the faculty in the Department of Chemistry at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1984-1993). Professor Phillips came to the University of Illinois Department of Physics in 1993.

Research

Strongly Correlated Electrons

A key goal is to understand the competing order that transpires when the Coulomb interaction exceeds the kinetic energy. Experimental systems in which the physics of strong correlations dominates include the cuprates, vanadium oxide, the ruthenates, and wide classes of organic materials that become superconducting under pressure. In such systems, magnetism, charge-density waves, pairing, spin-denisty waves, Mott transitions, and phase separation all occur at some range of doping or applied pressure. Aside from the magnetic states, which generally arise at zero (or low) doping (or pressure), and certain types of charge density wave states, none of the other ordered states that are observed experimentally has ever been explained, particularly superconductivity. An unfortunate feature of strong-correlation physics is the inapplicability of perturbation theory. In fact, there is no agreed-upon analytical methodology for approaching such problems. Hence, experiments are essential. In the area of strong-correlation physics, I focus on two types of experiments: 1) those on the new conducting phase in a 2D electron gas and 2) superconductivity in the cuprates and organics. My emphasis here is on developing non-perturbative ways of understanding the strong-coupling limits of the Hubbard model and the dilute 2D electron gas.

Quantum Critical Phenomena

My work on quantum critical phenomena is motivated by the growing evidence that in 2D systems exhibiting insulator-superconductor transitions, as well as in quantum-Hall to insulator transitions (QHIT), the longitudinal resistivity levels, as opposed to dropping to zero, as temperature tends to zero. It has been proposed that in all of these systems, dissipation gives rise to the metallic phase. However, no microscopic model has been solved that produces metallic behaviour at zero temperature. As this problem centers on zero-temperature transport properties, the all-important question of the non-commutativity of the frequency and temperature tending to zero limits is of utmost importance. Further, in this context, the question of internal versus external dissipation also arises. We have recently shown that once Cooper pairs loose their global phase coherence, collisions between Cooper pairs creates a metallic rather than an insulating state. In our current work we are characterizing the bose metal phase as well as exploring how both internal and external dissipation affect the transport properties near QHIT.

Publications

Choy, T-P and Phillips, PW. Doped Mott insulators are insulators: hole localization in the cuprates. Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 196405-1 (2005).

Phillips, PW and Chamon, C. Breakdown of one-parameter scaling in quantum critical scenarios for high-temperature copper-oxide superconductors. Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 107002-1 (2005).

Awards

  • General Councilor, American Physical Society
  • Bliss Faculty Scholar, University of Illinois College of Engineering, 2005
  • University Scholar, 2003
  • Fellow, American Physical Society, 2002
  • Edward A. Bouchet Award of the American Physical Society, 2000
  • Beckman Associate, Center for Advanced Study, 1999
  • Senior Xerox Faculty Research Award, University of Illinois College of Engineering, 1998
  • Miller Postdoctoral Fellowship, University of California at Berkeley, 1981-1984

Highlights

Chemistry at Illinois University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign