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Reversible Redox Properties of Multiferroic Sr<sub>1-x</sub>Ba<sub>x</sub>Mn<sub>1-y</sub>Ti<sub>y</sub>O<sub>2+</sub><sub>d</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

We report the phase transformations under various conditions of manganese-based multiferroic perovskite materials with 6% titanium-doping at the magnetic B site in Sr1-xBaxMn1-yTiyO2+d (with d ~ 0.4 – 1). A multiferroic perovskite material of the composition Sr0.4Ba0.6Mn0.94Ti0.06O2+d, was studied by in-situ TOF neutron diffraction under oxidizing and reducing conditions. Oxygen partial pressure dependence of the system’s structure at high temperature was investigated using POWGEN at the SNS, ORNL facility. A fully oxygenated precursor of the same composition was subjected to consequent redox annealing cycles from which we observed a reversible sequence of phase transformations. Slow annealing of an oxygen-deficient material (d ~ 0.4), on the other hand, under controlled oxygen partial pressure conditions give evidence for the presence of a miscibility gap with phase separation consisting of two coexisting phases having oxygen stoichiometries d ~ 0.4 and d ~ 1.0. Further, our results shed light on the suppression of the intermediate oxygen ordered states previously observed with the parent SrMnO2+d material.

Presenters

  • Elena Krivyakina

    Physics, Northern Illinois University

Authors

  • Elena Krivyakina

    Physics, Northern Illinois University

  • Stanislaw Kolesnik

    Physics, Northern Illinois University

  • Cheng Li

    OakRidge National Lab

  • Bogdan Dabrowski

    Physics, Northern Illinois University

  • Stephan Rosenkranz

    Materials Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory, Materials Science Division, Argonne National Lab, Materials Science, Argonne National Laboratory, Material Science, Argonne National Laboratory, Material Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Omar Chmaissem

    Physics, Northern Illinois University, Physics, Northern Illinois University, Material Science Division, Argonne National Lab, Northern Illinois University, Physics (NIU) and Material Science Division (ANL), Northern Illinois University