Spatially Controlled Octahedral Rotations and Metal-Insulator Transitions in Nickelate Superlattices

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Abstract

The properties of correlated oxides can be manipulated by forming short-period superlattices since the layer thicknesses are comparable with the typical length scales of the involved correlations and interface effects. Herein, we studied the metal-insulator transitions (MITs) in tetragonal NdNiO3/SrTiO3 superlattices by controlling the NdNiO3 layer thickness, n in the unit cell, spanning the length scale of the interfacial octahedral coupling. Scanning transmission electron microscopy reveals a crossover from a modulated octahedral superstructure at n = 8 to a uniform nontilt pattern at n = 4, accompanied by a drastically weakened insulating ground state. Upon further reducing n the predominant dimensionality effect continuously raises the MIT temperature, while leaving the antiferromagnetic transition temperature unaltered down to n = 2. Remarkably, the MIT can be enhanced by imposing a sufficiently large strain even with strongly suppressed octahedral rotations. Our results demonstrate the relevance for the control of oxide functionalities at reduced dimensions.

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Chen, B., Gauquelin, N., Green, R. J., Lee, J. H., Piamonteze, C., Spreitzer, M., … Koster, G. (2021). Spatially Controlled Octahedral Rotations and Metal-Insulator Transitions in Nickelate Superlattices. Nano Letters, 21(3), 1295–1302. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c03850

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