Formation of a two-dimensional single-component correlated electron system and band engineering in the nickelate superconductor NdNiO2

Abstract

Motivated by the recent experimental discovery of superconductivity in the infinite-layer nickelate Nd0.8Sr0.2NiO2 [Li , Nature (London) 572, 624 (2019)10.1038/s41586-019-1496-5], we study how the correlated Ni 3dx2−y2 electrons in the NiO2 layer interact with the electrons in the Nd layer. We show that three orbitals are necessary to represent the electronic structure around the Fermi level: Ni 3dx2−y2, Nd 5d3z2−r2, and a bonding orbital made from an interstitial s orbital in the Nd layer and the Nd 5dxy orbital. By constructing a three-orbital model for these states, we find that the hybridization between the Ni 3dx2−y2 state and the states in the Nd layer is tiny. We also find that the metallic screening by the Nd layer is not so effective in that it reduces the Hubbard U between the Ni 3dx2−y2 electrons just by 10%–20%. On the other hand, the electron-phonon coupling is not strong enough to mediate superconductivity of Tc∼10 K. These results indicate that NdNiO2 hosts an almost isolated correlated 3dx2−y2 orbital system. We further study the possibility of realizing a more ideal single-orbital system in the Mott-Hubbard regime. We find that the Fermi pockets formed by the Nd-layer states dramatically shrink when the hybridization between the interstitial s state and Nd 5dxy state becomes small. By an extensive materials search, we find that the Fermi pockets almost disappear in NaNd2NiO4 and NaCa2NiO3.

Publication
Phys. Rev. B Condens. Matter
Terumasa Tadano
Terumasa Tadano
Researcher of Materials Science

My research interests include development of computational methods and softwares for predicting thermal properties of solids, and application of machine-learning methods to material science study