Investigation of heterostructuring as a tuning knob for NdNiO<sub>3</sub> phase transitions
ORAL
Abstract
Heterostructuring provides a tuning knob for correlated materials, allowing phase transitions to be driven apart and low dimensional phases to be stabilized. NdNiO3 in its bulk state has concomitant para-antiferromagnetic and metal-insulator phase transitions. When two to four unit cell thick layers of NdNiO33 are interlaced with four unit cell thick NdAlO3 layers, a highly confining interface is formed, hindering the charge disproportionation and breathing mode which is responsible for the bulk antiferromagnetic state. This separates TN and TMI in equilibrium and massively changes the timescales and energy requirements of driven ultrafast phase transitions. Here we investigate the dynamics of the metal-insulator transition in NdNiO3/NdAlO3 heterostructures using pump-probe reflectivity and resonant soft x-ray scattering measurements. These measurements show that even weak interfacial confinement has a very strong damping effect on a driven insulating to metallic transition, i.e., samples which otherwise have bulklike magnetic timescales have near identical dynamics to samples where the magnetic order has been frustrated by strong confinement. This result points to a requirement for a long-range structural transition for the metallic state to stabilize for long times in driven materials.
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Presenters
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Sylvia L Griffitt
Cornell University
Authors
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Sylvia L Griffitt
Cornell University
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Christopher R Hennighausen
Cornell University
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Charles H Ahn
Yale University
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Frederick J Walker
Yale University
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Hoyoung Jang
Pohang Accelerator Laboratory
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Meenkyo Seo
POSTECH
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Michael Först
Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter
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Andrea Cavalleri
Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter
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Ankit S Disa
Cornell University