No Arabic abstract
The recent discovery of superconductivity in oxygen-reduced monovalent nickelates has raised a new platform for the study of unconventional superconductivity, with similarities and differences with the cuprate high temperature superconductors. In this paper we investigate the family of infinite-layer nickelates $R$NiO$_2$ with rare-earth $R$ spanning across the lanthanide series, introducing a new and non-trivial knob with which to tune nickelate superconductivity. When traversing from La to Lu, the out-of-plane lattice constant decreases dramatically with an accompanying increase of Ni $ d_{x^2-y^2}$ bandwidth; however, surprisingly, the role of oxygen charge transfer diminishes. In contrast, the magnetic exchange grows across the lanthanides which may be favorable to superconductivity. Moreover, compensation effects from the itinerant $5d$ electrons present a closer analogy to Kondo lattices, indicating a stronger interplay between charge transfer, bandwidth renormalization, compensation, and magnetic exchange. We also obtain the microscopic Hamiltonian using Wannier downfolding technique, which will provide the starting point for further many-body theoretical studies.
The search for oxide materials with physical properties similar to the cuprate high Tc superconductors, but based on alternative transition metals such as nickel, has grown and evolved over time. The recent discovery of superconductivity in doped inf
The discovery of infinite layer nickelate superconductor marks the new era in the field of superconductivity. In the rare-earth (Re) nickelates ReNiO2, although the Ni is also of d9 electronic configuration, analogous to Cu d9 in cuprates, whether electronic structures in infinite-layer nickelate are the same as cuprate and possess the single band feature as well are still open questions. To illustrate the electronic structure of rare-earth infinite-layer nickelate, we perform first principle calculations of LaNiO2 and NdNiO2 compounds and compare them with that of CaCuO2 using hybrid functional method together with Wannier projection and group symmetry analysis. Our results indicate that the Ni-dx2-y2 in the LaNiO2 has weak hybridization with other orbitals and exhibits characteristic single band feature, whereas in NdNiO2, the Nd-f orbital hybridizes with Ni-dx2-y2 and is a non-negligible ingredient for transport and even high-temperature superconductivity. Given that the Cu-dx2-y2 in cuprate strongly hybridizes with O-2p, the calculated band structures of nickelate imply some new band characters which is worth to gain more attentions.
We theoretically investigate the unconventional superconductivity in the newly discovered infinite-layer nickelates Nd$_{1-x}$Sr$_{x}$NiO$_{2}$ based on a two-band model. By analyzing the transport experiments, we propose that the doped holes dominantly enter the Ni $d_{xy}$ or/and $d_{3z^{2}-r^{2}}$ orbitals as charged carriers, and form a conducting band. Via the onsite Hund coupling, the doped holes are coupled to the Ni localized holes in the $d_{x^{2}-y^{2}}$ orbital band. We demonstrate that this two-band model could be further reduced to a Hund-Heisenberg model. Using the reduced model, we show the non-Fermi liquid state above the critical $T_{c}$ could stem from the carriers coupled to the spin fluctuations of the localized holes. In the superconducting phase, the short-range spin fluctuations mediate the carriers into Cooper pairs and establish $d_{x^{2}-y^{2}}$-wave superconductivity. We further predict that the doped holes ferromagnetically coupled with the local magnetic moments remain itinerant even at very low temperature, and thus the pseudogap hardly emerges in nickelates. Our work provides a new superconductivity mechanism for strongly correlated multi-orbital systems and paves a distinct way to exploring new superconductors in transition or rare-earth metal oxides.
The recent discovery of the superconductivity in the doped infinite layer nickelates $R$NiO$_2$ ($R$=La, Pr, Nd) is of great interest since the nickelates are isostructural to doped (Ca,Sr)CuO$_2$ having superconducting transition temperature ($T_{rm c}$) of about 110 K. Verifying the commonalities and differences between these oxides will certainly give a new insight into the mechanism of high $T_{rm c}$ superconductivity in correlated electron systems. In this paper, we review experimental and theoretical works on this new superconductor and discuss the future perspectives for the nickel age of superconductivity.
The discovery of superconductivity in infinite-layer nickelates brings us tantalizingly close to a new material class that mirrors the cuprate superconductors. Here, we report on magnetic excitations in these nickelates, measured using resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) at the Ni L3-edge, to shed light on the material complexity and microscopic physics. Undoped NdNiO2 possesses a branch of dispersive excitations with a bandwidth of approximately 200 meV, reminiscent of strongly-coupled, antiferromagnetically aligned spins on a square lattice, despite a lack of evidence for long range magnetic order. The significant damping of these modes indicates the importance of coupling to rare-earth itinerant electrons. Upon doping, the spectral weight and energy decrease slightly, while the modes become overdamped. Our results highlight the role of Mottness in infinite-layer nickelates.