4.8 Article

Template Engineering of Metal-to-Insulator Transitions in Epitaxial Bilayer Nickelate Thin Films

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 45, Pages 54466-54475

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c13675

Keywords

metal-to-insulator phase transition; template engineering; oxide; thin film; heteroepitaxy

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Science and ICT [NRF-2018R1D1A1B07043155, NRF2020R1F1A1057220, NRF-2019R1C1C1010345]
  2. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Education [NRF-2019R1A6A1A11053838, NRF-2020R1A4A1017915]
  3. DOE, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DEAC02-06CH11357]
  4. Basic Science Research Program through NRF [NRF-2019K1A3A7A09033393]
  5. Global Frontier Hybrid Interface Materials of the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Science and ICT [2013M3A6B1078872]
  6. Korea Basic Science Institute (National Research Facilities and Equipment Center) - Ministry of Education [2020R1A6C101A202]
  7. MSICT
  8. POSTECH
  9. National Research Foundation of Korea [2019K1A3A7A09033393] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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In this work, the transport properties in metal-to-insulator transitions of perovskite nickelates were shown to be tunable via epitaxial heterojunctions of LaNiO3 and NdNiO3 thin films. The structural engineering of the topmost LaNiO3 layer in LaNiO3/NdNiO3 bilayer thin films enabled an exotic phase that is unattainable in the parent compound. Modification of the NdNiO3 template layer thickness provided an additional knob for tailoring the linked transport characteristics.
Understanding metal-to-insulator phase transitions in solids has been a keystone not only for discovering novel physical phenomena in condensed matter physics but also for achieving scientific breakthroughs in materials science. In this work, we demonstrate that the transport properties (i.e., resistivity and transition temperature) in the metal-to-insulator transitions of perovskite nickelates are tunable via the epitaxial heterojunctions of LaNiO3 and NdNiO3 thin films. A mismatch in the oxygen coordination environment and interfacial octahedral coupling at the oxide heterointerface allows us to realize an exotic phase that is unattainable in the parent compound. With oxygen vacancy formation for strain accommodation, the topmost LaNiO3 layer in LaNiO3/NdNiO3 bilayer thin films is structurally engineered and it electrically undergoes a metal-to-insulator transition that does not appear in metallic LaNiO3. Modification of the NdNiO3 template layer thickness provides an additional knob for tailoring the tilting angles of corner-connected NiO6 octahedra and the linked transport characteristics further. Our approaches can be harnessed to tune physical properties in complex oxides and to realize exotic physical phenomena through oxide thin-film heterostructuring.

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