Identity of planar defects in the Infinite-layer' copper oxide superconductor
摘要:
THE 'infinite-layer' compound 1–3 AcuO 2 (where A stands for cations such as strontium or calcium), has the simplest structure of all superconducting copper oxides, with only bare cations separating the CuO 2 planes. Accordingly, an understanding of the doping mechanism(s) that lead to superconductivity in this compound may facilitate the elucidation of the same phenomenon in the other copper oxide superconductors. Recently, Azuma and co-workers 2,4 observed planar defects in an infinite-layer phase synthesized at high oxygen pressure and proposed that the defects are A-cation deficient and lead to superconductivity (with transition temperature T c ≈ 100–110 K) in this compound. Here, based on quantitative X-ray and high-resolution electron-microscopic analysis of the planar defects in (Sr, Ca)CuO 2 , we propose that the defects consist of a corrugated Sr–O layer substituted for a CuO 2 layer, with the incorporation of apical oxygen atoms (which are absent in the parent structure) at roughly half the available sites in the neighbouring Sr layers. This is equivalent to an insertion of a Sr 3 O 2 ± x block in an otherwise infinite-layer sequence. The variable oxygen stoichiometry of our defect model can account for the occurrence of p-type superconductivity (following high-pressure oxygenation), n-type superconductivity (high-pressure reduction) or lack of superconductivity (high-pressure neutral-atmosphere annealing) in this system, depending on the synthesis conditions 4 .
展开
DOI:
10.1038/370352a0
被引量:
年份:
1994
相似文献
参考文献
引证文献
来源期刊
引用走势
辅助模式
引用
文献可以批量引用啦~
欢迎点我试用!