The quasi-2D nickelate La4Ni 3 O8 (La-438), consisting of trilayer networks of square planar Ni ions, is a member of the so-called T? family, which is derived from the Ruddlesden-Popper (R-P) parent compound La4Ni 3 O10-x by removing two oxygen atoms and rearranging the rock salt layers to fluorite-type layers. Although previous studies on polycrystalline samples have identified a 105-K phase transition with a pronounced electronic and magnetic response but weak lattice character, no consensus on the origin of this transition has been reached. Here, we show using synchrotron X-ray diffraction on high-pO2 floating zone-grown single crystals that this transition is associated with a real space ordering of charge into a quasi-2D charge stripe ground state. The charge stripe superlattice propagation vector, q = (2/3, 0, 1), corresponds with that found in the related 1/3-hole doped single-layer R-P nickelate, La3/5Sr 1/3 NiO4 (LSNO-1/3; Ni2.33+ ), with orientation at 45° to the Ni-O bonds. The charge stripes in La-438 are weakly correlated along c to form a staggered ABAB stacking that reduces the Coulomb repulsion among the stripes. Surprisingly, however, we find that the charge stripes within each trilayer of La-438 are stacked in phase from one layer to the next, at odds with any simple Coulomb repulsion argument.
CITATION STYLE
Zhang, J., Chen, Y. S., Phelan, D., Zheng, H., Norman, M. R., & Mitchell, J. F. (2016). Stacked charge stripes in the quasi-2D trilayer nickelate La4 Ni3 O8. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113(32), 8945–8950. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1606637113
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