| Literature DB >> 31611403 |
Michele Kotiuga1, Zhen Zhang2, Jiarui Li3, Fanny Rodolakis4, Hua Zhou4, Ronny Sutarto5, Feizhou He5, Qi Wang2, Yifei Sun2, Ying Wang6, Neda Alsadat Aghamiri7, Steven Bennett Hancock7, Leonid P Rokhinson6, David P Landau7, Yohannes Abate7, John W Freeland4, Riccardo Comin3, Shriram Ramanathan2, Karin M Rabe1.
Abstract
Point defects, such as oxygen vacancies, control the physical properties of complex oxides, relevant in active areas of research from superconductivity to resistive memory to catalysis. In most oxide semiconductors, electrons that are associated with oxygen vacancies occupy the conduction band, leading to an increase in the electrical conductivity. Here we demonstrate, in contrast, that in the correlated-electron perovskite rare-earth nickelates, RNiO3 (R is a rare-earth element such as Sm or Nd), electrons associated with oxygen vacancies strongly localize, leading to a dramatic decrease in the electrical conductivity by several orders of magnitude. This unusual behavior is found to stem from the combination of crystal field splitting and filling-controlled Mott-Hubbard electron-electron correlations in the Ni 3d orbitals. Furthermore, we show the distribution of oxygen vacancies in NdNiO3 can be controlled via an electric field, leading to analog resistance switching behavior. This study demonstrates the potential of nickelates as testbeds to better understand emergent physics in oxide heterostructures as well as candidate systems in the emerging fields of artificial intelligence.Entities:
Keywords: charge localization; nickelates; oxygen deficiency; perovskite
Year: 2019 PMID: 31611403 PMCID: PMC6825322 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1910490116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205