Hybridization driving distortions and multiferroicity in rare-earth nickelates
Luca Binci, Michele Kotiuga, Iurii Timrov, Nicola Marzari

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to show that hybridization effects are crucial for accurately modeling the low-temperature phases and multiferroic properties of rare-earth nickelates, revealing the importance of inter-site interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a fully ab initio methodology incorporating both on-site and inter-site interactions to accurately predict phases and multiferroicity in rare-earth nickelates.
Findings
Inclusion of inter-site V is essential for correct phase characterization.
On-site U alone can suppress key structural distortions.
Predicted a magnetization-dependent polar phase supporting multiferroicity.
Abstract
For decades transition-metal oxides have generated a huge interest due to the multitude of physical phenomena they exhibit. In this class of materials, the rare-earth nickelates, NiO, stand out for their rich phase diagram stemming from complex couplings between the lattice, electronic and magnetic degrees of freedom. Here, we present a first-principles study of the low-temperature phase for two members of the NiO series, with Pr, Y. We employ density-functional theory with Hubbard corrections accounting not only for the on-site localizing interactions among the Ni-- electrons (), but also the inter-site hybridization effects between the transition-metals and the ligands (). All the \textit{U} and \textit{V} parameters are calculated from first-principles using density-functional perturbation theory, resulting in a fully \emph{ab initio} methodology. Our…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials · Multiferroics and related materials · Advanced Condensed Matter Physics
