222 research outputs found
Field-Induced Staggered Magnetic Order in La(2)NiO(4.133)
At low temperature the holes doped into the NiO(2) planes of La(2)NiO(4.133)
by the excess oxygen collect in diagonal stripes that separate narrow
antiferromagnetic domains. The magnetic order drops abruptly to zero at T_m =
110.5 K, but charge order remains with a period of 3a/2. We show that
application of a magnetic field in the regime T > T_m induces staggered
magnetic order of period 3a due to the net magnetic moment of the
high-temperature bond-centered stripes, together with the odd number of Ni
spins across an antiferromagnetic domain.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex, 4 epsf figs included with psfig
Orbital polaron lattice formation in lightly doped La1-xSrxMnO3
By resonant x-ray scattering at the Mn K-edge on La7/8Sr1/8MnO3, we show that
an orbital polaron lattice (OPL) develops at the metal-insulator transition of
this compound. This orbital reordering explains consistently the unexpected
coexistence of ferromagnetic and insulating properties at low temperatures, the
quadrupling of the lattice structure parallel to the MnO2-planes, and the
observed polarization and azimuthal dependencies. The OPL is a clear
manifestation of strong orbital-hole interactions, which play a crucial role
for the colossal magnetoresistance effect and the doped manganites in general
Quantitative determination of bond order and lattice distortions in nickel oxide heterostructures by resonant x-ray scattering
We present a combined study of Ni -edge resonant x-ray scattering and
density functional calculations to probe and distinguish electronically driven
ordering and lattice distortions in nickelate heterostructures. We demonstrate
that due to the low crystal symmetry, contributions from structural distortions
can contribute significantly to the energy-dependent Bragg peak intensities of
a bond-ordered NdNiO reference film. For a LaNiO-LaAlO superlattice
that exhibits magnetic order, we establish a rigorous upper bound on the
bond-order parameter. We thus conclusively confirm predictions of a dominant
spin density wave order parameter in metallic nickelates with a
quasi-two-dimensional electronic structure
Strain and composition dependence of the orbital polarization in nickelate superlattices
A combined analysis of x-ray absorption and resonant reflectivity data was
used to obtain the orbital polarization profiles of superlattices composed of
four-unit-cell-thick layers of metallic LaNiO3 and layers of insulating RXO3
(R=La, Gd, Dy and X=Al, Ga, Sc), grown on substrates that impose either
compressive or tensile strain. This superlattice geometry allowed us to partly
separate the influence of epitaxial strain from interfacial effects controlled
by the chemical composition of the insulating blocking layers. Our quantitative
analysis reveal orbital polarizations up to 25%. We further show that strain is
the most effective control parameter, whereas the influence of the chemical
composition of the blocking layers is comparatively small.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Probing Exfoliated Graphene Layers and Their Lithiation with Microfocused X-rays
X-ray diffraction is measured on individual bilayer and multilayer graphene single-crystals and combined with electrochemically induced lithium intercalation. In-plane Bragg peaks are observed by grazing incidence diffraction. Focusing the incident beam down to an area of about 10 μm × 10 μm, individual flakes are probed by specular X-ray reflectivity. By deploying a recursive Parratt algorithm to model the experimental data, we gain access to characteristic crystallographic parameters of the samples. Notably, it is possible to directly extract the bi/multilayer graphene c-axis lattice parameter. The latter is found to increase upon lithiation, which we control using an on-chip peripheral electrochemical cell layout. These experiments demonstrate the feasibility of in situ X-ray diffraction on individual, micron-sized single crystallites of few- and bilayer two-dimensional materials
Electric-field-induced pyroelectric order and localization of the confined electrons in LaAlO3/SrTiO3 heterostructures
With infrared ellipsometry, x-ray diffraction, and electric transport
measurements we investigated the electric-field-effect on the confined
electrons at the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface. We obtained evidence that the
localization of the electrons at low temperature and negative gate voltage is
induced, or at least strongly enhanced, by a pyroelectric phase transition in
SrTiO3 which strongly reduces the lattice polarizability and the subsequent
Coulomb screening. In particular, we show that the charge localisation and the
polar order of SrTiO3 both develop below about 50 K and exhibit similar,
unipolar hysteresis loops as a function of the gate voltage. Our findings
suggest that the pyroelectric order also plays an important role in the quantum
phase transition at very low temperatures where superconductivity is suppressed
by an electric field.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, supplementary materia
Dimensionality Control of Electronic Phase Transitions in Nickel-Oxide Superlattices
The competition between collective quantum phases in materials with strongly
correlated electrons depends sensitively on the dimensionality of the electron
system, which is difficult to control by standard solid-state chemistry. We
have fabricated superlattices of the paramagnetic metal LaNiO3 and the wide-gap
insulator LaAlO3 with atomically precise layer sequences. Using optical
ellipsometry and low-energy muon spin rotation, superlattices with LaNiO3 as
thin as two unit cells are shown to undergo a sequence of collective
metalinsulator and antiferromagnetic transitions as a function of decreasing
temperature, whereas samples with thicker LaNiO3 layers remain metallic and
paramagnetic at all temperatures. Metal-oxide superlattices thus allow control
of the dimensionality and collective phase behavior of correlated-electron
systems
A 4-unit-cell superstructure in optimally doped YBa2Cu3O6.92 superconductor
Using high-energy diffraction we show that a 4-unit-cell superstructure,
q0=(1/4,0,0), along the shorter Cu-Cu bonds coexists with superconductivity in
optimally doped YBCO. A complex set of anisotropic atomic displacements on
neighboring CuO chain planes, BaO planes, and CuO2 planes, respectively,
correlated over ~3-6 unit cells gives rise to diffuse superlattice peaks. Our
observations are consistent with the presence of Ortho-IV nanodomains
containing these displacements.Comment: Corrected typo in abstrac
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