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Many body electronic structure of infinite layer and trilayer nickelates

ORAL

Abstract

Motivated by recent experiments on infinite layer (RNiO2) and trilayer (R4Ni3O8) nickelate analogs of cuprate superconductors, we use a combination of density functional and dynamical mean field (DFT+DMFT) methods to perform a comparative study many body electronic structure of these materials, with a focus on CaCuO2, NdNiO2, and Pr4Ni3O8. We find that the correlated Ni-3d shells of both families of nickelates have similar many-body configurations. Additionally, when compared at the same nominal carrier concentration, the materials exhibit similar many-body electronic structures, self energies, and correlation strengths. Compared to cuprates, the nickelates are closer to the Mott-Hubbard regime due to their larger charge transfer energies. Moreover, doping involves the charge reservoir provided by the rare earth 5d electrons, as opposed to cuprates where it is realized via the oxygen 2p electrons. Like cuprates, the correlations in the nickelates are dominated by a dx2-y2 and O-pσ hybrid. Differences between the two families of nickelates can be attributed to the lack of c-axis dispersion in the trilayer nickelates, leading to differences in Fermiology that may be the primary driver of differences in material properties.

Presenters

  • Jonathan Karp

    Department of Applied Physics and Applied Math, Columbia University

Authors

  • Jonathan Karp

    Department of Applied Physics and Applied Math, Columbia University

  • Alexander Hampel

    Center For Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute, Center for Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute, Physics, Flatiron Institute, Simons Foundation

  • Manuel Zingl

    Center For Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute, Flatiron Institute

  • Antia Botana

    Arizona State University, Physics, Arizona State University, Department of Physics, Arizona State University, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Hyowon Park

    University of Illinois at Chicago, Department of Physics, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Illinois, Chicago

  • Michael Ray Norman

    Materials Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Andrew Millis

    Columbia University, Department of Physics, Columbia University, Flatiron Institute, Columbia Univ, Center for Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute, Flatiron Institute; Columbia Univ., Columbia University and Center for Computational Quantum Physics, Flatiron Institute