Versatile features of impurity doping effects on perovskite manganites,
R0.6Sr0.4MnO3, have been investigated with varying the doing
species as well as the R-dependent one-electron bandwidth. In
ferromagnetic-metallic manganites (R=La, Nd, and Sm), a few percent of Fe
substitution dramatically decreases the ferromagnetic transition temperature,
leading to a spin glass insulating state with short-range charge-orbital
correlation. For each R species, the phase diagram as a function of Fe
concentration is closely similar to that for R0.6Sr0.4MnO3
obtained by decreasing the ionic radius of R site, indicating that Fe doping
in the phase-competing region weakens the ferromagnetic double-exchange
interaction, relatively to the charge-orbital ordering instability. We have
also found a contrastive impact of Cr (or Ru) doping on a spin-glass insulating
manganite (R=Gd). There, the impurity-induced ferromagnetic magnetization is
observed at low temperatures as a consequence of the collapse of the inherent
short-range charge-orbital ordering, while Fe doping plays only a minor role.
The observed opposite nature of impurity doping may be attributed to the
difference in magnitude of the antiferromagnetic interaction between the doped
ions.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure