Bulk NdNiO2 is thermodynamically unstable with respect to decomposition while hydrogenation reduces the instability and transforms it from metal to insulator
Oleksandr I. Malyi, Julien Varignon, Alex Zunger

TL;DR
This study uses density functional theory to show that stoichiometric NdNiO2 is thermodynamically unstable and that hydrogenation stabilizes it while transforming its electronic properties from metallic to insulating.
Contribution
The paper reveals that hydrogen incorporation reduces NdNiO2 instability and changes its electronic state, challenging the assumption that pristine NdNiO2 is the actual superconducting phase.
Findings
NdNiO2 is thermodynamically unstable with respect to decomposition.
Hydrogen can be incorporated spontaneously, forming a stable hydride NdNiO2H.
Hydrogenated NdNiO2H is an insulator, unlike the metallic pristine form.
Abstract
Through CaH2 chemical reduction of a parent R3+Ni3+O3 perovskite form, superconductivity was recently achieved in Sr-doped NdNiO2 on SrTiO3 substrate. Using density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we find that stoichiometric NdNiO2 is significantly unstable with respect to decomposition into 1/2[Nd2O3 + NiO + Ni] with exothermic decomposition energy of +176 meV/atom, a considerably higher instability than that for common ternary oxides. This poses the question if the stoichiometric NdNiO2 nickelate compound used extensively to model the electronic band structure of Ni-based oxide analog to cuprates and found to be metallic is the right model for this purpose. To examine this, we study via DFT the role of the common H impurity expected to be present in the process of chemical reduction needed to obtain NdNiO2. We find that H can be incorporated exothermically, i.e., spontaneously…
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