356 research outputs found
Critical chain length and superconductivity emergence in oxygen-equalized pairs of YBa2Cu3O6.30
The oxygen-order dependent emergence of superconductivity in YBa2Cu3O6+x is
studied, for the first time in a comparative way, on pair samples having the
same oxygen content and thermal history, but different Cu(1)Ox chain
arrangements deriving from their intercalated and deintercalated nature.
Structural and electronic non-equivalence of pairs samples is detected in the
critical region and found to be related, on microscopic scale, to a different
average chain length, which, on being experimentally determined by nuclear
quadrupole resonance (NQR), sheds new light on the concept of critical chain
length for hole doping efficiency.Comment: 7 RevTex pages, 2 Postscript figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Synthesis and characterization of multiferroic BiMnO
We report on the high pressure synthesis of BiMnO, a manganite
displaying a "quadruple perovskite" structure. Structural characterization of
single crystal samples shows a distorted and asymmetrical coordination around
the Bi atom, due to presence of the lone pair, resulting in
non-centrosymmetric space group Im, leading to a permanent electrical dipole
moment and ferroelectric properties. On the other hand, magnetic
characterization reveals antiferromagnetic transitions, in agreement with the
isostructural compounds, thus evidencing two intrinsic properties that make
BiMnO a promising multiferroic material.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Singling out the effect of quenched disorder in the phase diagram of cuprates
We investigate the specific influence of structural disorder on the
suppression of antiferromagnetic order and on the emergence of cuprate
superconductivity. We single out pure disorder, by focusing on a series of
YEuBaCuO samples at fixed oxygen content
, in the range . The gradual Y/Eu isovalent substitution
smoothly drives the system through the Mott-insulator to superconductor
transition from a full antiferromagnet with N\'eel transition K at
to a bulk superconductor with superconducting critical temperature
K at , YBaCuO. The electronic properties are
finely tuned by gradual lattice deformations induced by the different cationic
radii of the two lanthanides, inducing a continuous change of the basal Cu(1)-O
chain length, as well as a controlled amount of disorder in the active
Cu(2)O bilayers. We check that internal charge transfer from the basal to
the active plane is entirely responsible for the doping of the latter and we
show that superconductivity emerges with orthorhombicity. By comparing
transition temperatures with those of the isoelectronic clean system we
deterime the influence of pure structural disorder connected with the Y/Eu
alloy.Comment: 10 pages 11 figures, submitted to Journal of Physics: Condensed
Matter, Special Issue in memory of Prof. Sandro Massid
Optical study of the vibrational and dielectric properties of BiMnO3
BiMnO3 (BMO), ferromagnetic (FM) below Tc = 100 K, was believed to be also
ferroelectric (FE) due to a non-centro-symmetric C2 structure, until
diffraction data indicated that its space group is the centro-symmetric C2/c.
Here we present infrared phonon spectra of BMO, taken on a mosaic of single
crystals, which are consistent with C2/c at any T > 10 K, as well as
room-temperature Raman data which strongly support this conclusion. We also
find that the infrared intensity of several phonons increases steadily for
decreasing T, causing the relative permittivity of BMO to vary from 18.5 at 300
K to 45 at 10 K. At variance with FE materials of displacive type, no
appreciable softening has been found in the infrared phonons. Both their
frequencies and intensities, moreover, appear insensitive to the FM transition
at Tc
Internal-strain mediated coupling between polar Bi and magnetic Mn ions in the defect-free quadruple-perovskite BiMnMnO
By means of neutron powder diffraction, we investigated the effect of the
polar Bi ion on the magnetic ordering of the Mn ions in
BiMnMnO, the counterpart with \textit{quadruple} perovskite
structure of the \textit{simple} perovskite BiMnO. The data are consistent
with a \textit{noncentrosymmetric} spacegroup which contrasts the
\textit{centrosymmetric} one previously reported for the isovalent and
isomorphic compound LaMnMnO, which gives evidence of a
Bi-induced polarization of the lattice. At low temperature, the two
Mn sublattices of the and sites order antiferromagnetically
(AFM) in an independent manner at 25 and 55 K, similarly to the case of
LaMnMnO. However, both magnetic structures of
BiMnMnO radically differ from those of LaMnMnO.
In BiMnMnO the moments of the sites form
an anti-body AFM structure, whilst the moments \textbf{M} of the
sites result from a large and \textit{uniform} modulation along the b-axis of the moments \textbf{M} in the
-plane. The modulation is strikingly correlated with the displacements of
the Mn ions induced by the Bi ions. Our analysis unveils a strong
magnetoelastic coupling between the internal strain created by the Bi
ions and the moment of the Mn ions in the sites. This is ascribed to
the high symmetry of the oxygen sites and to the absence of oxygen defects, two
characteristics of quadruple perovskites not found in simple ones, which
prevent the release of the Bi-induced strain through distortions or
disorder. This demonstrates the possibility of a large magnetoelectric coupling
in proper ferroelectrics and suggests a novel concept of internal strain
engineering for multiferroics design.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 5 table
Electron localization and possible phase separation in the absence of a charge density wave in single-phase 1T-VS
We report on a systematic study of the structural, magnetic and transport
properties of high-purity 1T-VS powder samples prepared under high
pressure. The results differ notably from those previously obtained by
de-intercalating Li from LiVS. First, no Charge Density Wave (CDW) is found
by transmission electron microscopy down to 94 K. Though, \textit{ab initio}
phonon calculations unveil a latent CDW instability driven by an acoustic
phonon softening at the wave vector (0.21,0.21,0)
previously reported in de-intercalated samples. A further indication of latent
lattice instability is given by an anomalous expansion of the V-S bond distance
at low temperature. Second, infrared optical absorption and electrical
resistivity measurements give evidence of non metallic properties, consistent
with the observation of no CDW phase. On the other hand, magnetic
susceptibility and NMR data suggest the coexistence of localized moments with
metallic carriers, in agreement with \textit{ab initio} band structure
calculations. This discrepancy is reconciled by a picture of electron
localization induced by disorder or electronic correlations leading to a phase
separation of metallic and non-metallic domains in the nm scale. We conclude
that 1T-VS is at the verge of a CDW transition and suggest that residual
electronic doping in Li de-intercalated samples stabilizes a uniform CDW phase
with metallic properties.Comment: 22 pages, 10 Figures. Full resolution pictures available at
http://journals.aps.org/prb/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevB.89.23512
Intrinsic electronic superconducting phases at 60 K and 90 K in double-layer YBaCuO
We study superconducting transition temperature () of oxygen-doped
double-layer high-temperature superconductors YBaCuO (0
1) as a function of the oxygen dopant concentration
() and planar hole-doping concentration (). We find that ,
while clearly influenced by the development of the chain ordering as seen in
the plot, lies on a universal curve originating at the
critical hole concentration () = 1/16 in the plot.
Our analysis suggests that the universal behavior of () can be
understood in terms of the competition and collaboration of chemical-phases and
electronic-phases that exist in the system. We conclude that the global
superconductivity behavior of YBaCuO as a function of
doping is electronically driven and dictated by pristine electronic phases at
magic doping numbers that follow the hierarchical order based on , such as
2 , 3 and 4 . We find that there are
at least two intrinsic electronic superconducting phases of = 60 K at 2
= 1/8 and = 90 K at 3 = 3/16.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Synthesis and crystal structure of C2/c Ca(Co, Mg)Si2O6 pyroxenes : effect of the cationic substitution on the cell volume
A series of clinopyroxenes along the CaMgSi2O6-CaCoSi2O6 join was synthesized by quenching from melt at 1500\ub0C and subsequent annealing at 1250\ub0C (at 0.0001 GPa). This protocol proved to be the most effective to obtain homogenous, impurity free and stoichiometric pyroxenes as run products. Electron microprobe analyses in energy-dispersive mode were conducted and single-crystal X-ray diffraction data were collected on the Ca(CoxMg1-x)Si2O6 pyroxenes, with x = 0.2, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6; anisotropic structure refinements were performed. The effects of the cation substitution at the M1 site are described at the atomic level. The experimental findings of this study allowed us to extend the comparative analysis of the structural features of pyroxenes with divalent cations at the M1 and M2 sites
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