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Field re-entrant superconductivity in Eu-doped infinite-layer nickelates

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Why This Matters

This research uncovers a novel magnetic-field-induced re-entrant superconducting phase in Eu-doped infinite-layer nickelates, highlighting the complex interplay between magnetism and superconductivity. It advances understanding of unconventional superconductors and opens new avenues for exploring magnetic effects in high-temperature superconductivity, which could lead to innovative applications in quantum technologies and electronic devices.

Key Takeaways

Intertwined superconducting and magnetic orders may give rise to exotic quantum phases1–7, including field-induced and re-entrant superconductivity8–10. However, such magnetism-enhanced superconductivity has remained elusive in superconductors with higher transition temperatures1–3. While infinite-layer nickelates represent a new class of unconventional superconductors11–20, the impact of rare-earth magnetism on superconducting properties remains largely unexplored. Here, we show that Eu-doped infinite-layer nickelate Sm 0.95−x Ca 0.05 Eu x NiO 2 exhibits a magnetic-field-induced re-entrant superconducting phase in the Eu-rich over-doped regime. Zero-resistance transport and high-field diamagnetic screening confirm the superconducting nature of this phase, which emerges after the initial suppression of low-field superconductivity and remains robust across a broad range of temperatures, fields and field orientations. In the same doping range, we observe nonlinear Hall transport and hysteretic magnetoresistance, indicating the unconventional nature of the re-entrant behaviour. While partially consistent with a compensation mechanism between the Eu-derived exchange field and the applied field, our data reveal pronounced deviations from this model at the highest-doping levels. Our findings establish infinite-layer nickelates as a fertile platform for exploring magnetically driven high-field superconductivity in strongly correlated oxides.