4.6 Article

Atomic-scale observation of spontaneous hole doping and concomitant lattice instabilities in strained nickelate films

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/ac4b10

Keywords

nickel oxides; charge doping; epitaxial strains; scanning transmission electron microscopy; electron energy-loss spectroscopy

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology Taiwan
  2. Center of Atomic Initiative for New Materials from the Featured Areas Research Center Program
  3. National Taiwan University Consortium of Electron Microscopy Key Technology
  4. iMATE project of Academia Sinica

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Thin oxide films offer vast opportunities for modern electronics, and this study demonstrates the twisting of metallic phases into distinct charge-lattice entangled states by epitaxial strains. The research reveals lattice instabilities and localized hole doping in LaNiO3, PrNiO3, and NdNiO3 films on SrTiO3. These findings indicate the existence of hidden orders in versatile oxide heterostructures with unexpected properties.
Thin oxide films are of vast opportunities for modern electronics and can facilitate emergent phenomena by factors absent in the bulk counterparts, such as the ubiquitous epitaxial strain and interfacial charge doping. Here, we demonstrate the twisting of intended bulk-metallic phases in 10-unit-cell LaNiO3, PrNiO3, and NdNiO3 films on (001)-oriented SrTiO3 into distinct charge-lattice entangled states by epitaxial strains. Using atomically-resolved electron microscopy and spectroscopy, the interfacial electron doping into SrTiO3 in the conventional context of band alignments are discounted. Instead, spontaneously doped holes that are localized and at the order of 10(13) cm(-2) are atomically unraveled across all three heterointerfaces and associated with strain mitigations by the accompanied atomic intermixing with various ionic radii. The epitaxial strains also lead to condensations of monoclinic-C2/c lattice instabilities, which are hidden to the bulk phase diagram. The group-theoretical analysis of characteristic transition pathways unveils the strain resurrection of the hidden C2/c symmetry. While this strain-induced monoclinic phase in LaNiO3 remains metallic at room temperature, those in PrNiO3 and NdNiO3 turn out to be insulating. Such strain-induced monoclinic lattice instabilities and parasitic localized holes go beyond the classical elastic deformations of films upon epitaxial strains and hint on plausible hidden orders in versatile oxide heterostructures with unexpected properties, of which the exploration is only at the infancy and full of potentials.

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