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Superconductivity in a quintuple-layer square-planar nickelate.

Grace A PanDan Ferenc SegedinHarrison LaBollitaQi SongEmilian M NicaBerit H GoodgeAndrew T PierceSpencer DoyleSteve NovakovDenisse Córdova CarrizalesAlpha T N'DiayePadraic ShaferHanjong PaikJohn T HeronJarad A MasonAmir YacobyLena F KourkoutisOnur ErtenCharles M BrooksAntia S BotanaJulia A Mundy
Published in: Nature materials (2021)
Since the discovery of high-temperature superconductivity in copper oxide materials1, there have been sustained efforts to both understand the origins of this phase and discover new cuprate-like superconducting materials2. One prime materials platform has been the rare-earth nickelates and, indeed, superconductivity was recently discovered in the doped compound Nd0.8Sr0.2NiO2 (ref. 3). Undoped NdNiO2 belongs to a series of layered square-planar nickelates with chemical formula Ndn+1NinO2n+2 and is known as the 'infinite-layer' (n = ∞) nickelate. Here we report the synthesis of the quintuple-layer (n = 5) member of this series, Nd6Ni5O12, in which optimal cuprate-like electron filling (d8.8) is achieved without chemical doping. We observe a superconducting transition beginning at ~13 K. Electronic structure calculations, in tandem with magnetoresistive and spectroscopic measurements, suggest that Nd6Ni5O12 interpolates between cuprate-like and infinite-layer nickelate-like behaviour. In engineering a distinct superconducting nickelate, we identify the square-planar nickelates as a new family of superconductors that can be tuned via both doping and dimensionality.
Keyphrases
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