Single crystal neutron diffraction is used to investigate the magnetic and
structural phase diagram of the electron doped superconductor
Ba(Fe1−xCox)2As2. Heat capacity and resistivity measurements have
demonstrated that Co doping this system splits the combined antiferromagnetic
and structural transition present in BaFe2As2 into two distinct
transitions. For x=0.025, we find that the upper transition is between the
high-temperature tetragonal and low-temperature orthorhombic structures with
(TTO=99±0.5 K) and the antiferromagnetic transition occurs at
TAF=93±0.5 K. We find that doping rapidly suppresses the
antiferromagnetism, with antiferromagnetic order disappearing at x≈0.055. However, there is a region of co-existence of antiferromagnetism and
superconductivity. The effect of the antiferromagnetic transition can be seen
in the temperature dependence of the structural Bragg peaks from both neutron
scattering and x-ray diffraction. We infer from this that there is strong
coupling between the antiferromagnetism and the crystal lattice