Abstract
The discovery of unconventional superconductivity often triggers significant interest in associated electronic and structural symmetry breaking phenomena. For the infinite-layer nickelates, structural allotropes are investigated intensively. Here, using high-energy grazing-incidence x-ray diffraction, we demonstrate how in-situ temperature annealing of the infinite-layer nickelate PrNiO2+x (x ≈ 0) induces a giant superlattice structure. The annealing effect has a maximum well above room temperature. By covering a large scattering volume, we show a rare period-six in-plane (bi-axial) symmetry and a period-four symmetry in the out-of-plane direction. This giant unit-cell superstructure—likely stemming from ordering of diffusive oxygen—persists over a large temperature range and can be quenched. As such, the stability and controlled annealing process leading to the formation of this superlattice structure provides a pathway for novel nickelate chemistry.
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CITATION STYLE
Oppliger, J., Küspert, J., Dippel, A. C., v. Zimmermann, M., Gutowski, O., Ren, X., … Chang, J. (2025). Discovery of giant unit-cell super-structure in the infinite-layer nickelate PrNiO2+x. Communications Materials, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43246-024-00729-4
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