Resolving Structural Origins for Superconductivity in Strain-Engineered La$_3$Ni$_2$O$_7$ Thin Films
Lopa Bhatt, Abigail Y. Jiang, Eun Kyo Ko, Noah Schnitzer, Grace A., Pan, Dan Ferenc Segedin, Yidi Liu, Yijun Yu, Yi-Feng Zhao, Edgar Abarca, Morales, Charles M. Brooks, Antia S. Botana, Harold Y. Hwang, Julia A. Mundy,, David A. Muller, Berit H. Goodge

TL;DR
This study uses advanced electron microscopy to directly observe how strain-induced structural changes in La$_3$Ni$_2$O$_7$ thin films influence superconductivity, revealing the importance of in-plane biaxial compression and octahedral distortions.
Contribution
It provides the first atomic-scale structural analysis of strained La$_3$Ni$_2$O$_7$ films, linking specific lattice distortions to superconductivity, challenging previous assumptions about c-axis compression.
Findings
In-plane biaxial compression enhances superconductivity.
Nickel-oxygen octahedral distortions are key structural factors.
Crystalline symmetry lifting correlates with superconducting behavior.
Abstract
The discovery of high-temperature superconductivity in bulk LaNiO under high hydrostatic pressure and, more recently, biaxial compression in epitaxial thin films has ignited significant interest in understanding the interplay between atomic and electronic structure in these compounds. Subtle changes in the nickel-oxygen bonding environment are thought to be key drivers for stabilizing superconductivity, but specific details of which bonds and which modifications are most relevant remains so far unresolved. While direct, atomic-scale structural characterization under hydrostatic pressure is beyond current experimental capabilities, static stabilization of strained LaNiO films provides a platform well-suited to investigation with new picometer-resolution electron microscopy methods. Here, we use multislice electron ptychography to directly measure the atomic-scale…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials · Electronic and Structural Properties of Oxides · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
