Persistent structural distortions and absent superconductivity in trilayer nickelate thin films
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A new family of high-temperature superconductors was recently discovered in the $n=2,3$ Ruddlesden-Popper nickelates, where superconductivity emerges concomitant with suppression of parent density waves and structural octahedral rotations under hydrostatic pressure. Intriguingly, compressive strain mimics the structural effects of pressure in the $n=2$ phase, yielding ambient-pressure superconductivity. However, analogous strain-stabilized superconductivity has not been realized in the $n=3$. Here, we use atomically-precise synthesis, transport, picoscale electron microscopy, and synchrotron X-ray diffraction to probe $n=3$ La$_4$Ni$_3$O$_{10}$ thin films. Although compressive strain suppresses density wave order, we do not observe superconductivity even under the largest strain state. Importantly, we identify a structural distortion unique to strained $n=3$ thin films that may inhibit superconductivity: persistent, layer-inequivalent octahedral rotations around the $c$-axis. Our results highlight key differences between the $n=3$ and $n=2$ systems, suggesting that ambient-pressure superconductivity in the $n=3$ may require new methods beyond epitaxial strain engineering.
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