Oxygen ordered phases and resonant scattering measurements of the infinite-layer nickelates

ORAL

Abstract

Materials hosting unconventional and high Tc superconductivity demonstrate complex phase diagrams where superconductivity cooperates and competes with other ground states involving entangled charge, lattice, and spin degrees of freedom. The infinite-layer nickelates, RENiO2, RE=La, Nd, Pr, offer a novel platform to study the nature of high Tc superconductivity and the normal state from which it emerges – possibly allowing discernment of the universal elements of the high Tc phase diagram. While the normal state of the infinite-layer nickelates shows noticeable differences from that of the cuprates (lacking a long-range ordered AFM insulating phase), recent work has shed light on some of the similarities, including the presence of magnetic fluctuations and a purported charge ordered phase in the undoped material. However, this class of materials poses significant synthesis challenges which must be overcome to reveal their intrinsic ground state properties. Here, we discuss the synthesis of perovskite and infinite-layer nickelates by reactive oxide molecular beam epitaxy and activated hydrogen reduction. We then reexamine the presence of charge density wave order in NdNiO2 and, using a multimodal approach, show that the previously reported 3a0 ordering can be attributed to interstitial oxygen ordering rather than a correlation driven density wave.

* This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under contract no. DE-SC0019414, by the National Science Foundation through grant No. DMR-2104427 and by the Platform for the Accelerated Realization, Analysis and Discovery of Interface Materials (PARADIM) under Cooperative Agreement No. DMR-2039380. Additional support was provided by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (Grant No. FA9550-21-1-0168).

Publication: Absence of 3a0 Charge Density Wave Order in the Infinite Layer Nickelates (Under Review)
Synthesis of the perovskite and infinite-layer nickelates by ozone assisted molecular beam epitaxy and activated hydrogen reduction (Submitted)

Presenters

  • Christopher T Parzyck

    Cornell University

Authors

  • Christopher T Parzyck

    Cornell University

  • Naman K Gupta

    University of Waterloo

  • Yi Wu

    Cornell University

  • Vivek Anil

    Cornell University

  • Lopa Bhatt

    Cornell University

  • Michael Bouliane

    University of Waterloo

  • Rantong Gong

    University of Waterloo

  • Benjamin Z Gregory

    Cornell University

  • Aileen Luo

    Cornell University

  • Ronny Sutarto

    Canadian Light Source, Canadian Lightsource

  • Feizhou He

    Canadian Light Source

  • Yi-De Chuang

    Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Advanced Light Source (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Tao Zhou

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • Gervasi Herranz

    Institute for Materials Science of Barcelona ICMAB-CSIC

  • Lena F Kourkoutis

    Cornell University

  • Andrej Singer

    Cornell University

  • Darrell G Schlom

    Cornell University, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Cornell University

  • David G Hawthorn

    University of Waterloo

  • Kyle M Shen

    Cornell University