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Superconducting nickelates are a new family of strongly correlated electron materials with a phase diagram closely resembling that of superconducting cuprates. While analogy with the cuprates is natural, very little is known about the metallic state of the nickelates, making these comparisons difficult. We probe the electronic dispersion of thin-film superconducting five-layer ( ) and metallic three-layer ( ) nickelates by measuring the Seebeck coefficient . We find a temperature-independent and negative for both and nickelates. These results are in stark contrast to the strongly temperature-dependent measured at similar electron filling in the cuprate . The electronic structure calculated from density-functional theory can reproduce the temperature dependence, sign, and amplitude of in the nickelates using Boltzmann transport theory. This demonstrates that the electronic structure obtained from first-principles calculations provides a reliable description of the fermiology of superconducting nickelates and suggests that, despite indications of strong electronic correlations, there are well-defined quasiparticles in the metallic state. Finally, we explain the differences in the Seebeck coefficient between nickelates and cuprates as originating in strong dissimilarities in impurity concentrations. Our study demonstrates that the high elastic scattering limit of the Seebeck coefficient reflects only the underlying band structure of a metal, analogous to the high magnetic field limit of the Hall coefficient. This opens a new avenue for Seebeck measurements to probe the electronic band structures of relatively disordered quantum materials. Published by the American Physical Society2024more » « less
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We report the discovery of a novel form of Ruddlesden−Popper (RP) nickelate that stands as the first example of long-range, coherent polymorphism in this class of inorganic solids. Rather than the well-known, uniform stacking of perovskite blocks ubiquitously found in RP phases, this newly discovered polymorph of the bilayer RP phase La3Ni2O7 adopts a novel stacking sequence in which single-layer and trilayer blocks of NiO6 octahedra alternate in a “1313” sequence. Crystals of this new polymorph are described in space group Cmmm, although we note evidence for a competing Imam variant. Transport measurements at ambient pressure reveal metallic character with evidence of a charge density wave transition with an onset at T ≈ 134 K. The discovery of such polymorphism could reverberate to the expansive range of science and applications that rely on RP materials, particularly the recently reported signatures of superconductivity in bilayer La3Ni2O7 with Tc as high as 80 K above 14 GPa.more » « less
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