Web Release Date: June 4,
Substitution Behavior and Stable Charge Carrier Species in Long-Bond Length Layered Cuprates




and

Materials Science and Engineering Department, Northwestern University, 2225 N. Campus Dr., Evanston, Illinois 60208-3108, and Department of Chemistry, Northwestern University, 2145 Sheridan Rd., Evanston Illinois 60208
Received December 29, 1998
Revised Manuscript Received April 21, 1999
Abstract:
The stabilities of charge carriers, the transport properties, and the defect structures of
the layered, quadruple perovskite La2Ba2Cu2Sn2O11 have been investigated by chemical
substitutions, powder X-ray diffraction, and simultaneous high-temperature electrical
conductivity and thermopower measurements. The in-plane copper-oxygen bond lengths,
in cooperation with the copper-coordination environment, are observed to control the chemical
solubilities, stable charge carrier species, and oxygen defects. Potential n-type substitutions
are successful via the substitution of niobium for tin. However, oxygen defects are
demonstrated to be important compensation species for the incorporation of the substituted
cations and in the mediation of the charge carrier concentration with the ambient atmosphere
in the near-synthesis temperature region. These materials are intrinsic semiconductors and
display crossover from n-type to p-type behavior with increasing oxygen partial pressure,
from 10-5 to 1 atm pO2, in the temperature range from 600 to 800
C. Furthermore, the
transport parameters are shown to be composition-dependent for these compounds and
asymmetric with respect to electron and electron-hole conduction, in contrast to other layered
copper oxides. Specifics of the inner architecture of layered copper oxides, particularly residual
internal stresses between layers, are discussed with respect to their control over the redox
behavior of copper-oxygen networks, and the implications of these findings are elaborated
on with respect to the realization of new n-type superconductors.
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