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Main Authors: Zhou, Guangdi, Wang, Heng, Huang, Haoliang, Chen, Yaqi, Peng, Fei, Lv, Wei, Nie, Zihao, Wang, Wei, Xue, Qi-Kun, Chen, Zhuoyu
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.04708
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author Zhou, Guangdi
Wang, Heng
Huang, Haoliang
Chen, Yaqi
Peng, Fei
Lv, Wei
Nie, Zihao
Wang, Wei
Xue, Qi-Kun
Chen, Zhuoyu
author_facet Zhou, Guangdi
Wang, Heng
Huang, Haoliang
Chen, Yaqi
Peng, Fei
Lv, Wei
Nie, Zihao
Wang, Wei
Xue, Qi-Kun
Chen, Zhuoyu
contents Ambient-pressure superconductivity in nickelates has been capped at an onset transition temperature ($T_{c}^{onset}$) of ~50 K, a value that remains lower than the cuprate (~133 K) and iron-based (~55 K) counterparts, despite the promise shown under high pressure. Here, we report ambient-pressure superconductivity onset at ~63 K in epitaxial (La,Pr)3Ni2O7 thin films grown under compressive strain on SrLaAlO4 substrates. This $T_{c}$ leap is enabled by pushing our gigantic-oxidative atomic-layer-by-layer epitaxy (GAE) method into an extreme non-equilibrium growth regime. It simultaneously enhances kinetics via higher temperatures and achieves full oxygenation in situ without post-annealing. Synchrotron X-ray diffraction and scanning transmission electron microscopy confirm that this approach yields films of large-scale crystalline purity, overcoming the inherent metastability of the strained superconducting phase. Transport measurements reveal a zero-resistance temperature ($T_{c}^{zero}$) reaching ~37 K, while mutual inductance measurements demonstrate a robust diamagnetic transition starting at ~23 K. These films exhibit a systematic evolution in their normal-state resistivity-temperature curve: the power-law exponent $α$ evolves from Fermi-liquid-like ($α$ ~2) at lower $T_{c}^{onset}$ to strange-metal-like ($α$ ~1) in higher $T_{c}^{onset}$ samples, directly linking the enhanced superconductivity to non-Fermi liquid behavior. Mapping the vortex melting phase diagram by the mutual inductance technique further reveals 2D melting limit suppressed to near zero, which demonstrates significantly stronger interlayer coupling than that of cuprates. These results identify the nickelates as an ambient-pressure strange-metal high-temperature superconductors with strong interlayer coupling.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_04708
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Superconductivity onset above 60 K in ambient-pressure nickelate films
Zhou, Guangdi
Wang, Heng
Huang, Haoliang
Chen, Yaqi
Peng, Fei
Lv, Wei
Nie, Zihao
Wang, Wei
Xue, Qi-Kun
Chen, Zhuoyu
Superconductivity
Ambient-pressure superconductivity in nickelates has been capped at an onset transition temperature ($T_{c}^{onset}$) of ~50 K, a value that remains lower than the cuprate (~133 K) and iron-based (~55 K) counterparts, despite the promise shown under high pressure. Here, we report ambient-pressure superconductivity onset at ~63 K in epitaxial (La,Pr)3Ni2O7 thin films grown under compressive strain on SrLaAlO4 substrates. This $T_{c}$ leap is enabled by pushing our gigantic-oxidative atomic-layer-by-layer epitaxy (GAE) method into an extreme non-equilibrium growth regime. It simultaneously enhances kinetics via higher temperatures and achieves full oxygenation in situ without post-annealing. Synchrotron X-ray diffraction and scanning transmission electron microscopy confirm that this approach yields films of large-scale crystalline purity, overcoming the inherent metastability of the strained superconducting phase. Transport measurements reveal a zero-resistance temperature ($T_{c}^{zero}$) reaching ~37 K, while mutual inductance measurements demonstrate a robust diamagnetic transition starting at ~23 K. These films exhibit a systematic evolution in their normal-state resistivity-temperature curve: the power-law exponent $α$ evolves from Fermi-liquid-like ($α$ ~2) at lower $T_{c}^{onset}$ to strange-metal-like ($α$ ~1) in higher $T_{c}^{onset}$ samples, directly linking the enhanced superconductivity to non-Fermi liquid behavior. Mapping the vortex melting phase diagram by the mutual inductance technique further reveals 2D melting limit suppressed to near zero, which demonstrates significantly stronger interlayer coupling than that of cuprates. These results identify the nickelates as an ambient-pressure strange-metal high-temperature superconductors with strong interlayer coupling.
title Superconductivity onset above 60 K in ambient-pressure nickelate films
topic Superconductivity
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.04708