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Anomalous Structural Phase Transition in Ferromagnetic SrCoO<sub>2.875</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

The concept of electronic phase separation explains several unusual magnetic and electronic properties of doped perovskite oxides such as cuprates, manganites, and cobaltites. Strontium cobalt oxide with varying oxygen concentration (SrCoO3-y, 0 < y < 0.125) is one of the systems which shows magnetic phase separation for intermediate oxygen values. The end points are SrCoO2.875 which is ferromagnetic with Tc=220 K and SrCoO3 which is also ferromagnetic but with Tc=280K. Samples with intermediate values of oxygen concentration show two phase magnetic behavior between these values, but a single average structure as determined by diffraction. We undertook high resolution x-ray powder diffraction measurements to better understand the underlying structure. SrCoO3 remains in the simple cubic perovskite structure from 10–300 K. SrCoO2.875 has a much more complicated structure. At room temperature it is tetragonal with an expanded unit cell. Upon cooling, the structure appears to undergo a second order transition to a cubic phase. This is extremely unusual and the opposite of typical structural transitions which proceed to lower symmetry structures at lower temperatures. We present our structural studies of the phases identified.

Presenters

  • Amani S Jayakody

    Gettysburg College

Authors

  • Amani S Jayakody

    Gettysburg College