Control of oxygen stoichiometry in complex oxides via topotactic phase
transition is an interesting avenue to not only modifying the physical
properties, but utilizing in many energy technologies, such as energy storage
and catalysts. However, detailed structural evolution in the close proximity of
the topotactic phase transition in multivalent oxides has not been much
studied. In this work, we used strontium cobaltites (SrCoOx) epitaxially grown
by pulsed laser epitaxy (PLE) as a model system to study the oxidation-driven
evolution of the structure, electronic, and magnetic properties. We grew
coherently strained SrCoO2.5 thin films and performed post-annealing at various
temperatures for topotactic conversion into the perovskite phase
(SrCoO3-{\delta}). We clearly observed significant changes in electronic
transport, magnetism, and microstructure near the critical temperature for the
topotactic transformation from the brownmillerite to the perovskite phase.
Nevertheless, the overall crystallinity was well maintained without much
structural degradation, indicating that topotactic phase control can be a
useful tool to control the physical properties repeatedly via redox reactions.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure