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Electronic correlations and magnetic interactions in infinite-layer NdNiO2

2020, Katukuri, Vamshi M., Bogdanov, Nikolay A., Weser, Oskar, Van den Brink, Jeroen, Alavi, Ali

The large antiferromagnetic exchange coupling in the parent high-Tc cuprate superconductors is believed to play a crucial role in pairing the superconducting carriers. The recent observation of superconductivity in hole-doped infinite-layer (IL-) NdNiO2 brings to the fore the relevance of magnetic coupling in high-Tc superconductors, particularly because no magnetic ordering is observed in the undoped IL-NdNiO2, unlike in parent copper oxides. Here, we investigate the electronic structure and the nature of magnetic exchange in IL-NdNiO2 using state-of-the-art many-body quantum chemistry methods. From a systematic comparison of the electronic and magnetic properties with isostructural cuprate IL-CaCuO2, we find that the on-site dynamical correlations are significantly stronger in IL-NdNiO2 compared to the cuprate analog. These dynamical correlations play a critical role in the magnetic exchange resulting in an unexpectedly large antiferromagnetic nearest-neighbor isotropic J of 77 meV between the Ni1+ ions within the ab plane. While we find many similarities in the electronic structure between the nickelate and the cuprate, the role of electronic correlations is profoundly different in the two. We further discuss the implications of our findings in understanding the origin of superconductivity in nickelates. © 2020 authors.

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Magnetic warping in topological insulators

2022, Naselli, Gabriele, Moghaddam, Ali G., Di Napoli, Solange, Vildosola, Verónica, Fulga, Ion Cosma, van den Brink, Jeroen, Facio, Jorge I.

We analyze the electronic structure of topological surface states in the family of magnetic topological insulators MnBi2nTe3n+1. We show that, at natural-cleavage surfaces, the Dirac cone warping changes its symmetry from hexagonal to trigonal at the magnetic ordering temperature. In particular, an energy splitting develops between the surface states of the same band index but opposite surface momenta upon formation of the long-range magnetic order. As a consequence, measurements of such energy splittings constitute a simple protocol to detect the magnetic ordering via the surface electronic structure, alternative to the detection of the surface magnetic gap. Interestingly, while the latter signals a nonzero surface magnetization, the trigonal warping predicted here is, in addition, sensitive to the direction of the surface magnetic flux. Our results may be particularly useful when the Dirac point is buried in the projection of the bulk states, caused by certain terminations of the crystal or in hole-doped systems, since in both situations the surface magnetic gap itself is not accessible in photoemission experiments.

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Lifshitz transition in titanium carbide driven by a graphene overlayer

2023, Krivenkov, M., Marchenko, D., Golias, E., Sajedi, M., Frolov, A.S., Sánchez-Barriga, J., Fedorov, A., Yashina, L.V., Rader, O., Varykhalov, A.

Two-dimensional (2D) Dirac materials are electronically and structurally very sensitive to proximity effects. We demonstrate, however, the opposite effect: that the deposition of a monolayer 2D material could exercise a substantial influence on the substrate electronic structure. Here we investigate TiC(111) and show that a graphene overlayer produces a proximity effect, changing the Fermi surface topology of the TiC from six electron pockets to one hole pocket on the depth of several atomic layers inside the substrate. In addition, the graphene electronic structure undergoes an extreme modification as well. While the Dirac cone remains gapless, it experiences an energy shift of 1.0 eV beyond what was recently achieved for the Lifshitz transition of overdoped graphene. Due to this shift, the antibonding π∗ band at the M¯ point becomes occupied and observable by photoemission.

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V4 tetrahedral units in AV4X8 lacunar spinels: Near degeneracy, charge fluctuations, and configurational mixing within a valence space of up to 21 d orbitals

2020, Hozoi, L., Eldeeb, M.S., Rößler, U.K.

All properties of a given molecule or solid are determined by the way valence electrons are distributed over single-particle energy levels. For multiple, closely spaced single-particle levels, different occupation patterns may provide many-electron quantum states that are close in energy, interact, and admix. We address such near-degeneracy electron correlation effects for V4 vanadium tetrahedral units as encountered in the lacunar spinel GaV4S8, explicitly taking into account up to 21 vanadium valence orbitals, and find effective orbital occupation numbers much different as compared to the picture previously laid out on the basis of mean-field calculations. In light of these results, a modified theoretical frame seems necessary to explain the peculiar magnetic properties of lacunar spinels and of related compounds.

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Two-dimensional ferromagnetic extension of a topological insulator

2023, Kagerer, P., Fornari, C. I., Buchberger, S., Tschirner, T., Veyrat, L., Kamp, M., Tcakaev, A. V., Zabolotnyy, V., Morelhão, S. L., Geldiyev, B., Müller, S., Fedorov, A., Rienks, E., Gargiani, P., Valvidares, M., Folkers, L. C., Isaeva, A., Büchner, B., Hinkov, V., Claessen, R., Bentmann, H., Reinert, F.

Inducing a magnetic gap at the Dirac point of the topological surface state (TSS) in a three-dimensional (3D) topological insulator (TI) is a route to dissipationless charge and spin currents. Ideally, magnetic order is present only at the surface, as through proximity of a ferromagnetic (FM) layer. However, experimental evidence of such a proximity-induced Dirac mass gap is missing, likely due to an insufficient overlap of TSS and the FM subsystem. Here, we take a different approach, namely ferromagnetic extension (FME), using a thin film of the 3D TI Bi2Te3, interfaced with a monolayer of the lattice-matched van der Waals ferromagnet MnBi2Te4. Robust 2D ferromagnetism with out-of-plane anisotropy and a critical temperature of Tc≈15 K is demonstrated by x-ray magnetic dichroism and electrical transport measurements. Using angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy, we observe the opening of a sizable magnetic gap in the 2D FM phase, while the surface remains gapless in the paramagnetic phase above Tc. Ferromagnetic extension paves the way to explore the interplay of strictly 2D magnetism and topological surface states, providing perspectives for realizing robust quantum anomalous Hall and chiral Majorana states.

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Multiscale simulations of the electronic structure of III-nitride quantum wells with varied indium content: Connecting atomistic and continuum-based models

2021, Chaudhuri, D., O’Donovan, M., Streckenbach, T., Marquardt, O., Farrell, P., Patra, S.K., Koprucki, T., Schulz, S.

Carrier localization effects in III-N heterostructures are often studied in the frame of modified continuum-based models utilizing a single-band effective mass approximation. However, there exists no comparison between the results of a modified continuum model and atomistic calculations on the same underlying disordered energy landscape. We present a theoretical framework that establishes a connection between atomistic tight-binding theory and continuum-based electronic structure models, here a single-band effective mass approximation, and provide such a comparison for the electronic structure of (In,Ga)N quantum wells. In our approach, in principle, the effective masses are the only adjustable parameters since the confinement energy landscape is directly obtained from tight-binding theory. We find that the electronic structure calculated within effective mass approximation and the tight-binding model differ noticeably. However, at least in terms of energy eigenvalues, an improved agreement between the two methods can be achieved by adjusting the band offsets in the continuum model, enabling, therefore, a recipe for constructing a modified continuum model that gives a reasonable approximation of the tight-binding energies. Carrier localization characteristics for energetically low lying, strongly localized states differ, however, significantly from those obtained using the tight-binding model. For energetically higher lying, more delocalized states, good agreement may be achieved. Therefore, the atomistically motivated continuum-based single-band effective mass model established provides a good, computationally efficient alternative to fully atomistic investigations, at least at when targeting questions related to higher temperatures and carrier densities in (In,Ga)N systems.

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Measurement of Spin Dynamics in a Layered Nickelate Using X-Ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy: Evidence for Intrinsic Destabilization of Incommensurate Stripes at Low Temperatures

2021, Ricci, Alessandro, Poccia, Nicola, Campi, Gaetano, Mishra, Shrawan, Müller, Leonard, Joseph, Boby, Shi, Bo, Zozulya, Alexey, Buchholz, Marcel, Trabant, Christoph, Lee, James C. T., Viefhaus, Jens, Goedkoop, Jeroen B., Nugroho, Agustinus Agung, Braden, Markus, Roy, Sujoy, Sprung, Michael, Schüßler-Langeheine, Christian

We study the temporal stability of stripe-type spin order in a layered nickelate with x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy and observe fluctuations on timescales of tens of minutes over a wide temperature range. These fluctuations show an anomalous temperature dependence: they slow down at intermediate temperatures and speed up on both heating and cooling. This behavior appears to be directly connected with spatial correlations: stripes fluctuate slowly when stripe correlation lengths are large and become faster when spatial correlations decrease. A low-temperature decay of nickelate stripe correlations, reminiscent of what occurs in cuprates as a result of a competition between stripes and superconductivity, hence occurs via loss of both spatial and temporal correlations.

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Autocorrected off-axis holography of two-dimensional materials

2020, Kern, Felix, Linck, Martin, Wolf, Daniel, Alem, Nasim, Arora, Himani, Gemming, Sibylle, Erbe, Artur, Zettl, Alex, Büchner, Bernd, Lubk, Axel

The reduced dimensionality in two-dimensional materials leads to a wealth of unusual properties, which are currently explored for both fundamental and applied sciences. In order to study the crystal structure, edge states, the formation of defects and grain boundaries, or the impact of adsorbates, high-resolution microscopy techniques are indispensable. Here we report on the development of an electron holography (EH) transmission electron microscopy (TEM) technique, which facilitates high spatial resolution by an automatic correction of geometric aberrations. Distinguished features of EH beyond conventional TEM imaging are gap-free spatial information signal transfer and higher dose efficiency for certain spatial frequency bands as well as direct access to the projected electrostatic potential of the two-dimensional material. We demonstrate these features with the example of h-BN, for which we measure the electrostatic potential as a function of layer number down to the monolayer limit and obtain evidence for a systematic increase of the potential at the zig-zag edges.

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Self-organized formation of unidirectional and quasi-one-dimensional metallic Tb silicide nanowires on Si(110)

2022, Appelfeller, Stephan, Franz, Martin, Karadag, Murat, Kubicki, Milan, Zielinski, Robert, Krivenkov, Maxim, Varykhalov, Andrei, Preobrajenski, Alexei, Dähne, Mario

Terbium induced nanostructures on Si(110) and their growth are thoroughly characterized by low energy electron diffraction, scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy, core-level and valence band photoelectron spectroscopy, and angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy. For low Tb coverage, a wetting layer forms with its surface fraction continuously decreasing with increasing Tb coverage in favor of the formation of unidirectional Tb silicide nanowires. These nanowires show high aspect ratios for high annealing temperatures or on substrates already containing Tb in the bulk. Both wetting layer and nanowires are stable for temperatures up to 750°C. In contrast to the nanowires, the wetting layer is characterized by a band gap. Thus, the metallic nanowires, which show a quasi-one-dimensional electronic band structure, are embedded in a semiconducting surrounding of wetting layer and substrate, insulating the nanowires from each other.

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Charge-transfer energy in iridates: A hard x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy study

2020, Takegami, D., Kasinathan, D., Wolff, K.K., Altendorf, S.G., Chang, C.F., Hoefer, K., Melendez-Sans, A., Utsumi, Y., Meneghin, F., Ha, T.D., Yen, C.H., Chen, K., Kuo, C.Y., Liao, Y.F., Tsuei, K.D., Morrow, R., Wurmehl, S., Büchner, B., Prasad, B.E., Jansen, M., Komarek, A.C., Hansmann, P., Tjeng, L.H.

We have investigated the electronic structure of iridates in the double perovskite crystal structure containing either Ir4+ or Ir5+ using hard x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The experimental valence band spectra can be well reproduced using tight-binding calculations including only the Ir 5d, O 2p, and O 2s orbitals with parameters based on the downfolding of the density-functional band structure results. We found that, regardless of the A and B cations, the A2BIrO6 iridates have essentially zero O 2p to Ir 5d charge-transfer energies. Hence double perovskite iridates turn out to be extremely covalent systems with the consequence being that the magnetic exchange interactions become very long ranged, thereby hampering the materialization of the long-sought Kitaev physics. Nevertheless, it still would be possible to realize a spin-liquid system using the iridates with a proper tuning of the various competing exchange interactions.