Pronounced interplay between intrinsic phase-coexistence and octahedral tilt magnitude in hole-doped lanthanum cuprates
Abstract
Definitive understanding of superconductivity and its interplay with structural symmetry in the hole-doped lanthanum cuprates remains elusive. The suppression of superconductivity around 1/8th doping maintains particular focus, often attributed to charge-density waves (CDWs) ordering in the low-temperature tetragonal (LTT) phase. Central to many investigations into this interplay is the thesis that La$_1$$_.$$_8$$_7$$_5$Ba$_0$$_.$$_1$$_2$$_5$CuO$_4$ and particularly La$_1$$_.$$_6$$_7$$_5$Eu$_0$$_.$$_2$Sr$_0$$_.$$_1$$_2$$_5$CuO$_4$ present model systems of purely LTT structure at low temperature. However, combining single-crystal and high-resolution powder X-ray diffraction, we find these to exhibit significant, intrinsic coexistence of LTT and low-temperature orthorhombic domains, typically associated with superconductivity, even at 10 K. Our two-phase models reveal substantially greater tilting of CuO$_6$ octahedra in the LTT phase, markedly buckling the CuO$_2$ planes. This would couple significantly to band narrowing, potentially indicating a picture of electronically driven phase segregation, reminiscent of optimally doped manganites. These results call for reassessment of many experiments seeking to elucidate structural and electronic interplay at 1/8 doping. Show more
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https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000567768Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Scientific ReportsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
NatureOrganisational unit
09778 - Simonov, Arkadiy / Simonov, Arkadiy
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