Origin of Magnetic Order in the Rare-Earth Nickelate Perovskites Investigated by 17O-NMR

ORAL

Abstract

Because of their poorly understood high-temperature metal–insulator transition and their unusual low-temperature magnetic order, the rare-earth nickelate perovskites RENiO3 have received a lot of attention in recent years. The antiferromagnetic order with a propagation vector q = (1/4, 1/4, 1/4) (w.r.t. the pseudocubic unit cell) breaks the crystalline inversion symmetry. The microscopic origin of this non-trivial magnetic order is still unclear. Our temperature dependent 17O-NMR relaxation measurements on isotopically enriched SmNiO3 reveal the appearance of additional magnetic fluctuations below the metal–insulator transition, which then freeze out at the magnetic phase transition. We argue that this indicates that fluctuations with q = (1/4, 1/4, 1/4) are “switched on” only in the insulating phase, growing stronger upon cooling, and finally causing the magnetic phase transition.

Presenters

  • Lukas Korosec

    Laboratory for Solid State Physics, ETH Zürich

Authors

  • Lukas Korosec

    Laboratory for Solid State Physics, ETH Zürich

  • Marek Pikulski

    Laboratory for Solid State Physics, ETH Zürich

  • Dariusz Gawryluk

    Paul Scherrer Institute, Laboratory for Scientific Developments and Novel Materials, Paul Scherrer Institut

  • Kazimierz Conder

    Laboratory for scientific developments and novel materials, Paul Scherrer Institute, Paul Scherrer Institute

  • Toni Shiroka

    Laboratory for Solid State Physics, ETH Zürich

  • Marisa Medarde

    Paul Scherrer Institute

  • José Alonso

    Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid, CSIC

  • Hans Ott

    Laboratory for Solid State Physics, ETH Zürich

  • Joel Mesot

    Paul Scherrer Institute, Swiss Light Source, Paul Scherrer Institute