Metal-insulator transition in copper oxides induced by apex displacements
Swagata Acharya, Cedric Weber, Evgeny Plekhanov, Dimitar Pashov, A, Taraphder, Mark van Schilfgaarde

TL;DR
This study investigates how displacing apical oxygens in copper oxides influences their electronic phases, revealing a transition from Mott insulator to metal and implications for high-temperature superconductivity.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that small apical oxygen displacements can induce a Mott insulator to metal transition in La2CuO4, providing new insights into the mechanisms behind high-Tc superconductivity.
Findings
Apical oxygen displacement drives LCO from Mott insulator to metal.
Maximum d-wave order parameter occurs at the transition point.
NCO behavior is linked to large apical displacements in LCO.
Abstract
High temperature superconductivity has been found in many kinds of compounds built from planes of Cu and O, separated by spacer layers. Understanding why critical temperatures are so high has been the subject of numerous investigations and extensive controversy. To realize high temperature superconductivity, parent compounds are either hole-doped, such as {LaCuO} (LCO) with Sr (LSCO), or electron doped, such as {NdCuO} (NCO) with Ce (NCCO). In the electron doped cuprates, the antiferromagnetic phase is much more robust than the superconducting phase. However, it was recently found that the reduction of residual out-of-plane apical oxygens dramatically affects the phase diagram, driving those compounds to a superconducting phase. Here we use a recently developed first principles method to explore how displacement of the apical oxygen (A-O) in LCO affects the optical…
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