Novel electronic behavior driving NdNiO3 metal-insulator transition (1412.0676v3)
Abstract: We present evidence that the metal-insulator transition (MIT) in a tensile strained NdNiO3 (NNO) film is facilitated by a redistribution of electronic density and neither requires Ni charge disproportionation nor symmetry change [1, 2]. Given epitaxial tensile strain in thin NNO films induces preferential occupancy of the $e_g$ $d_{x2-y2}$ orbital ($s_{3z2-r2}$) we propose the larger transfer integral of this orbital state with the O 2p mediates a redistribution of electronic density from the Ni atom. A decrease in Ni $d_{x2-y2}$ orbital occupation is directly observed by resonant inelastic x-ray scattering below the MIT temperature. Furthermore, an increase in Nd charge occupancy is measured by x-ray absorption at the Nd L3 edge. Both spin-orbit coupling and crystal field effects combine to break the degeneracy of the Nd 5d states shifting the energy of the Nd $e_g$ $d_{x2-y2}$ orbital towards the Fermi level allowing the A site to become an active acceptor during the MI transition. This work identifies the relocation of electrons from the Ni 3d to the Nd 5d orbitals across the MIT. We propose the insulating gap opens between the Ni 3d and O 2p resulting from Ni 3d electron localization mediated by charge loss. The transition seems neither purely Mott-Hubbard nor simple charge transfer.
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