Spectroscopy-guided simulations of the metal-insulator transition in RENIO<sub>3</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

The metal-to-insulator transition (MIT) in the rare-earth nickelate series, RENiO3, remains a central open question due to the complex interplay of electron–electron interactions that stabilize a negative charge-transfer, bond-disproportionate ground state[1]. Interest in this system has been renewed by the recent discovery of superconductivity in nickelate thin films[2]. We present Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering (RIXS) studies on nine compounds (RE = La, Pr, Nd, Sm, Gd, Dy, Y, Ho, Er)[3]. Our results reveal that the MIT is strongly influenced by a complex crystal-field environment. To interpret the data, we compute Wannier orbitals to constrain model parameters and perform two-site exact diagonalization calculations[4], enabling quantitative modeling of both XAS and RIXS spectra. From these, we extract energy scales for charge transfer (△), hopping integrals and bond disproportionation[5]. We discuss the implications of these findings for the mechanism driving the MIT in bulk RENiO3.

Publication: [1] Zaanen et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 55, 418– 421 (1985)
[2] Pan et al,. Nature Materials 21, 160-164 (2022)
[3] Klein et al., Cryst. Growth Des. 2021, 21, 4230−4241
[4] Green et al., PRB 94, 195127 (2016)
[5] Catalano et al 2018 Rep. Prog. Phys. 81 046501

Presenters

  • Edward Mercer

    • Northeastern University

Authors

  • Edward Mercer

    • Northeastern University
  • Carlos W Galdino

    • Paul Scherrer Institute
  • Liam T Schmidt

    • Northeastern University
  • Dariusz Gawryluk

    • Paul Scherrer Institute
  • Ian Berry

    • Northeastern University
  • Hai-Ping Cheng

    • Northeastern University
  • Marisa Merdarde

    • Paul Scherrer Institute
  • Thorsten Schmitt

    • Paul Scherrer Institute
  • Alberto de la Torre Durran

    • Northeastern University
    • Northeastern University College of Science