Physical Review Research (May 2022)

Magnetic correlations in infinite-layer nickelates: An experimental and theoretical multimethod study

  • R. A. Ortiz,
  • P. Puphal,
  • M. Klett,
  • F. Hotz,
  • R. K. Kremer,
  • H. Trepka,
  • M. Hemmida,
  • H.-A. Krug von Nidda,
  • M. Isobe,
  • R. Khasanov,
  • H. Luetkens,
  • P. Hansmann,
  • B. Keimer,
  • T. Schäfer,
  • M. Hepting

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.4.023093
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
p. 023093

Abstract

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We report a comprehensive study of magnetic correlations in LaNiO_{2}, a parent compound of the recently discovered family of infinite-layer (IL) nickelate superconductors, using multiple experimental and theoretical methods. Our specific heat, muon-spin rotation (μSR), and magnetic susceptibility measurements on polycrystalline LaNiO_{2} show that long-range magnetic order remains absent down to 2 K. Nevertheless, we detect residual entropy in the low-temperature specific heat, which is compatible with a model fit that includes paramagnon excitations. The μSR and low-field static and dynamic magnetic susceptibility measurements indicate the presence of short-range magnetic correlations and glassy spin dynamics, which we attribute to local oxygen nonstoichiometry in the average infinite-layer crystal structure. This glassy behavior can be suppressed in strong external fields, allowing us to extract the intrinsic paramagnetic susceptibility. Remarkably, we find that the intrinsic susceptibility shows non-Curie-Weiss behavior at high temperatures, in analogy to doped cuprates that possess robust nonlocal spin fluctuations. The distinct temperature dependence of the intrinsic susceptibility of LaNiO_{2} can be theoretically understood by a multimethod study of the single-band Hubbard model in which we apply complementary cutting-edge quantum many-body techniques (dynamical mean-field theory, cellular dynamical mean-field theory, and the dynamical vertex approximation) to investigate the influence of both short- and long-ranged correlations. Our results suggest a profound analogy between the magnetic correlations in parent (undoped) IL nickelates and doped cuprates.