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A substantial hybridization between correlated Ni-<i>d</i> orbital and itinerant electrons in infinite-layer nickelates

ORAL

Abstract

The discovery of unconventional superconductivity in hole-doped NdNiO2, similar to CaCuO2, has received enormous attention. However, different from CaCuO2, NdNiO2 and LaNiO2 has itinerant electrons in the rare-earth spacer layer. Previous studies show that the hybridization between Ni-����2−��2 and rare-earth-d orbitals is very weak and thus RNiO2 is still a promising analog of CaCuO2. Here, we perform first-principles calculations to show that the hybridization between Ni-����2−��2 orbital and itinerant electrons in RNiO2 are substantially stronger than previously thought. The dominant hybridization comes from an interstitial-s orbital rather than rare-earth-d orbitals, due to a large inter-cell hopping. Because of the hybridization, Ni local moment is screened by itinerant electrons, the antiferromagnetic fluctuation is suppressed and the critical UNi to stabilize a long-range magnetic ordering is increased. Our work shows that the electronic structure of RNiO2 is distinct from CaCuO2, implying that the observed superconductivity in infinite-layer nickelates does not emerge from a doped Mott insulator.

Presenters

  • Yin Zhou

    Department of Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics, Columbia University

Authors

  • Yin Zhou

    Department of Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics, Columbia University

  • Yuhao Gu

    Chinese Academy of Science

  • sichen zhu

    NYU-ECNU Institute of Physics, New York University Shanghai

  • Xiaoxuan Wang

    NYU-ECNU Institute of Physics, New York University Shanghai

  • Jiangping Hu

    Beijing National Laboratory for Condensed Matter Physics, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences,Institute of Physics, Institute of physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

  • Hanghui Chen

    NYU-ECNU Institute of Physics, NYU Shanghai, Department of Physics, New York University, NYU Shanghai, New York University Shanghai, NYU-ECNU Institute of Physics, New York University Shanghai