Latent instabilities in metallic LaNiO 3 films by strain control of Fermi-surface topology

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Abstract

Strain control is one of the most promising avenues to search for new emergent phenomena in transition-metal-oxide films. Here, we investigate the strain-induced changes of electronic structures in strongly correlated LaNiO 3 (LNO) films, using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and the dynamical mean-field theory. The strongly renormalized e g -orbital bands are systematically rearranged by misfit strain to change its fermiology. As tensile strain increases, the hole pocket centered at the A point elongates along the k z -axis and seems to become open, thus changing Fermi-surface (FS) topology from three- to quasi-two-dimensional. Concomitantly, the FS shape becomes flattened to enhance FS nesting. A FS superstructure with Q 1 = (1/2,1/2,1/2) appears in all LNO films, while a tensile-strained LNO film has an additional Q 2 = (1/4,1/4,1/4) modulation, indicating that some instabilities are present in metallic LNO films. Charge disproportionation and spin-density-wave fluctuations observed in other nickelates might be their most probable origins.

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Yoo, H. K., Hyun, S. I., Moreschini, L., Kim, H. D., Chang, Y. J., Sohn, C. H., … Noh, T. W. (2015). Latent instabilities in metallic LaNiO 3 films by strain control of Fermi-surface topology. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep08746

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