Structural origins of the infamous "Low Temperature Orthorhombic" to "Low Temperature Tetragonal" phase transition in high-Tc cuprates

Abstract

We undertake a detailed high-resolution diffraction study of a novel plain band insulator, La2MgO4, which may be viewed as a structural surrogate system of the undoped end-member of the high-Tc superconductors, La2-x-yA2+xRE3+yCuO4 (A = Ba, Sr, RE= Rare Earth). We find that La2MgO4 exhibits the infamous low-temperature orthorhombic (LTO) to low-temperature tetragonal (LTT) phase transition that has been linked to the suppression of superconductivity in a variety of underdoped cuprates, including the well known La2-xBaxCuO4 (x=0.125). Furthermore, we find that the LTO-to-LTT phase transition in La2MgO4 occurs for an octahedral tilt angle in the 4 to 5 range, similar to that which has previously been identified as a critical tipping point for superconductivity in these systems. We show that this phase transition, occurring in a system lacking spin correlations and competing electronic states such as charge-density waves and superconductivity, can be understood by simply navigating the density-functional theory ground-state energy landscape as a function of the order parameter amplitude. This result calls for a careful re-investigation of the origins of the phase transitions in high-Tc superconductors based on the hole-doped, n = 1 Ruddelsden-Popper lanthanum cuprates.

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