2 research outputs found
Magnetic interactions in cubic-, hexagonal- and trigonal barium iron oxide fluoride, BaFeO2F
57Fe Mössbauer spectra have been recorded from the hexagonal (6H)- and trigonal (15R)- modifications of BaFeO2F and are compared with those previously recorded
from the cubic form of BaFeO2F. The spectra, recorded over a temperature range from 15 to 650K show that all of the iron in all the compounds is in the Fe3+ state. Spectra from the 6H- and 15R- modifications were successfully fitted with components that were related to the Fe(1) and Fe(2) structural sites in the 6H variant and to the Fe(1), Fe(2) and Fe(3) structural sites in the 15R form. The magnetic
ordering temperatures were determined as 597±3K for 6H-BaFeO2F and 636±3K for 15R-BaFeO2F. These values are surprisingly close to the value of 645±5K determined for the cubic form. The magnetic interactions in the three forms are compared with a view to explaining this similarity of magnetic ordering temperature.
Keywords : Mossbauer barium iron oxide fluorid
Soft Chemical Control of Superconductivity in Lithium Iron Selenide Hydroxides LiFe(OH)FeSe
Hydrothermal synthesis is described of layered lithium iron selenide hydroxides LiFex(OH)FeSe (x0.2; 0.02 < < 0.15) with a wide range of iron site vacancy concentrations in the iron selenide layers. This iron vacancy concentration is revealed as the only significant compositional variable and as the key parameter controlling the crystal structure and the electronic properties. Single crystal X-ray diffraction, neutron powder diffraction, and X-ray absorption spectroscopy measurements are used to demonstrate that superconductivity at temperatures as high as 40 K is observed in the hydrothermally synthesized samples when the iron vacancy concentration is low ( < 0.05) and when the iron oxidation state is reduced slightly below +2, while samples with a higher vacancy concentration and a correspondingly higher iron oxidation state are not superconducting. The importance of combining a low iron oxidation state with a low vacancy concentration in the iron selenide layers is emphasized by the demonstration that reductive postsynthetic lithiation of the samples turns on superconductivity with critical temperatures exceeding 40 K by displacing iron atoms from the LiFe(OH) reservoir layer to fill vacancies in the selenide layer