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Charge disproportionation without charge transfer in the rare-earth nickelates as a possible mechanism for the metal-insulator transition

Published 10 Oct 2013 in cond-mat.str-el | (1310.2674v1)

Abstract: We study a model for the metal-insulator (MI) transition in the rare-earth nickelates RNiO$3$, based upon a negative charge transfer energy and coupling to a rock-salt like lattice distortion of the NiO$_6$ octahedra. Using exact diagonalization and the Hartree-Fock approximation we demonstrate that electrons couple strongly to these distortions. For small distortions the system is metallic, with ground state of predominantly $d8\ligand$ character, where $\ligand$ denotes a ligand hole. For sufficiently large distortions ($\delta d{\rm Ni-O} \sim 0.05 - 0.10\AA$), however, a gap opens at the Fermi energy as the system enters a periodically distorted state alternating along the three crystallographic axes, with $(d8\ligand2){S=0}(d8){S=1}$ character, where $S$ is the total spin. Thus the MI transition may be viewed as being driven by an internal volume "collapse" where the NiO$_6$ octahedra with two ligand holes shrink around their central Ni, while the remaining octahedra expand accordingly, resulting in the ($1/2,1/2,1/2$) superstructure observed in x-ray diffraction in the insulating phase. This insulating state is an example of a new type of charge ordering achieved without any actual movement of the charge.

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