Distortion mode anomalies in bulk PrNiO$_3$ illustrating the potential of symmetry-adapted distortion mode analysis for the study of phase transitions
D.J. Gawryluk, Y. M. Klein, T. Shang, D. Sheptyakov, L. Keller, N., Casati, J. Rodr\'iguez-Carvajal, Ph. Lacorre, M.T. Fern\'andez-D\'iaz, M., Medarde

TL;DR
This study uses symmetry-adapted distortion mode analysis to investigate the structural and electronic phase transitions in PrNiO3, revealing abrupt mode changes, a linear correlation with magnetization, and a hidden symmetry in the insulating phase.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive symmetry-based analysis of structural distortions in PrNiO3, linking mode amplitudes to electronic and magnetic properties across the phase transition.
Findings
Abrupt increases in distortion modes at the metal-insulator transition.
Linear correlation between charge order breathing mode and magnetization.
Discovery of a hidden symmetry in the insulating phase.
Abstract
The origin of the metal-to-insulator transition in RNiO3 perovskites with trivalent 4f ion has challenged the condensed matter research community for almost three decades. A drawback for progress in this direction has been the lack of studies combining physical properties and accurate structural data covering the full nickelate phase diagram. Here we focus on a small region close to the itinerant limit (R = Pr, 1.5K < T < 300K), where we investigate the gap opening and the simultaneous emergence of charge order in PrNiO3. We combine electric resistance, magnetization, and heat capacity measurements with high resolution neutron and synchrotron x-ray powder diffraction data that, in contrast to previous studies, we analyze in terms of symmetry-adapted distortion modes. Such analysis allows to identify the contribution of the different modes to the global distortion in a broad temperature…
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