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.
CITATION STYLE
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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