Structural modifications in strain-engineered bilayer nickelate thin films | Nature
Subjects
- Superconducting properties and materials
- Surfaces, interfaces and thin films
- Techniques and instrumentation
- Theory and computation
Abstract
The discovery of high-temperature superconductivity in bulk La3Ni2O7 under high hydrostatic pressure1−4 and biaxial compression in epitaxial thin films5−8 has ignited significant interest in understanding the interplay between atomic and electronic structure in these compounds. Subtle changes in the nickel-oxygen bonding environment are thought to be key drivers for stabilizing superconductivity, but specific details of which bonds and which modifications are most relevant remains so far unresolved. While direct, atomic-scale structural characterization under hydrostatic pressure is beyond current experimental capabilities, static stabilization of strained La3Ni2O7 films provides a platform well-suited to investigation with new picometer-resolution electron microscopy methods. Here, we use multislice electron ptychography (MEP)9,10 to directly measure the atomic-scale structural evolution of La3Ni2O7 thin films across a wide range of biaxial strains tuned via substrate choice. By resolving both the cation and oxygen sublattices, we study the strain-dependent evolution of atomic bonds, providing the opportunity to isolate and disentangle the effects of specific structural motifs for stabilizing superconductivity. We identify the lifting of crystalline symmetry through modification of the nickel-oxygen octahedral distortions under compressive strain as a key structural ingredient for superconductivity and identify in-plane lattice compression as a common attribute between bulk and thin film superconductivity. Building upon the detailed structures obtained by MEP, we introduce a theoretical framework to disentangle coupled structural distortions in corner-sharing octahedra11, which suggest that both known superconducting geometries of La3Ni2O7 (hydrostatic pressure and compressive strain) suppress local t2g orbital mixing in the low-energy Ni bands by raising the octahedral symmetry.
Access through your institution
Buy or subscribe
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution
Access options
Access through your institution
Access Nature and 54 other Nature Portfolio journals
Get Nature+, our best-value online-access subscription
$32.99 / 30 days
cancel any time
Learn more
Subscribe to this journal
Receive 51 print issues and online access
$199.00 per year
only $3.90 per issue
Learn more
Rent or buy this article
Prices vary by article type
from$1.95
to$39.95
Learn more
Prices may be subject to local taxes which are calculated during checkout
Similar content being viewed by others
Superconductivity in Sr-doped La3Ni2O7 thin films
Article
18 August 2025