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Electronic structure of the parent compound of superconducting infinite-layer nickelates.

Matthias HeptingDanfeng LiChunjing JiaH LuE ParisY TsengX FengM OsadaE BeenY HikitaY-D ChuangZ HussainKe-Jin ZhouA NagM Garcia-FernandezMatteo RossiH Y HuangD J HuangZhi-Xun ShenT SchmittH Y HwangB MoritzJ ZaanenT P DevereauxW S Lee
Published in: Nature materials (2020)
The search continues for nickel oxide-based materials with electronic properties similar to cuprate high-temperature superconductors1-10. The recent discovery of superconductivity in the doped infinite-layer nickelate NdNiO2 (refs. 11,12) has strengthened these efforts. Here, we use X-ray spectroscopy and density functional theory to show that the electronic structure of LaNiO2 and NdNiO2, while similar to the cuprates, includes significant distinctions. Unlike cuprates, the rare-earth spacer layer in the infinite-layer nickelate supports a weakly interacting three-dimensional 5d metallic state, which hybridizes with a quasi-two-dimensional, strongly correlated state with [Formula: see text] symmetry in the NiO2 layers. Thus, the infinite-layer nickelate can be regarded as a sibling of the rare-earth intermetallics13-15, which are well known for heavy fermion behaviour, where the NiO2 correlated layers play an analogous role to the 4f states in rare-earth heavy fermion compounds. This Kondo- or Anderson-lattice-like 'oxide-intermetallic' replaces the Mott insulator as the reference state from which superconductivity emerges upon doping.
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