Intrinsic Spin Susceptibility and Pseudogap-like Behavior in Infinite-Layer LaNiO2

The recent discovery of superconductivity in doped infinite-layer nickelates has stimulated intensive interest, especially for similarities and differences compared to that in cuprate superconductors. In contrast to cuprates, although earlier magnetization measurement reveals a Curie-Weiss-like beha...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2021-04
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, D, Zhou, Y B, Y Fu, Wang, L, Zhou, X F, Cheng, H, J Li, Song, D W, Li, S J, Kang, B L, Zheng, L X, Nie, L P, Wu, Z M, Shan, M, Yu, F H, Ying, J J, Wang, S M, Mei, J W, T Wu, Chen, X H
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The recent discovery of superconductivity in doped infinite-layer nickelates has stimulated intensive interest, especially for similarities and differences compared to that in cuprate superconductors. In contrast to cuprates, although earlier magnetization measurement reveals a Curie-Weiss-like behavior in undoped infinite-layer nickelates, there is no magnetic ordering observed by elastic neutron scattering down to liquid helium temperature. Until now, the nature of the magnetic ground state in undoped infinite-layer nickelates was still elusive. Here, we perform a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiment through 139La nuclei to study the intrinsic spin susceptibility of infinite-layer LaNiO2. First, the signature for magnetic ordering or freezing is absent in the 139La NMR spectrum down to 0.24 K, which unambiguously confirms a paramagnetic ground state in LaNiO2. Second, a pseudogap-like behavior instead of Curie-Weiss-like behavior is observed in both the temperature-dependent Knight shift and nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate (1/T1), which is widely observed in both underdoped cuprates and iron-based superconductors. Furthermore, the scaling behavior between the Knight shift and 1/T1T has also been discussed. Finally, the present results imply a considerable exchange interaction in infinite-layer nickelates, which sets a strong constraint for the proposed theoretical models.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2104.11187