A new A(n)B(n)O(3n-2) homologous series of anion-deficient perovskites has been evidenced by preparation of the members with n = 5 (Pb(2.9)Ba(2.1)Fe(4)TiO(13)) and n = 6 (Pb(3.8)Bi(0.2)Ba(2)Fe(4.2)Ti(1.8)O(16)) in a single phase form. The crystal structures of these compounds were determined using a combination of transmission electron microscopy and X-ray and neutron powder diffraction (S.G. Ammm, a = 5.74313(7), b = 3.98402(4), c = 26.8378(4) Å, R(I) = 0.035, R(P) = 0.042 for Pb(2.9)Ba(2.1)Fe(4)TiO(13) and S.G. Imma, a = 5.7199(1), b = 3.97066(7), c = 32.5245(8) Å, R(I) = 0.032, R(P) = 0.037 for Pb(3.8)Bi(0.2)Ba(2)Fe(4.2)Ti(1.8)O(16)). The crystal structures of the A(n)B(n)O(3n-2) homologues are formed by slicing the perovskite structure with (101)(p) crystallographic shear (CS) planes. The shear planes remove a layer of oxygen atoms and displace the perovskite blocks with respect to each other by the 1/2[110](p) vector. The CS planes introduce edge-sharing connections of the transition metal-oxygen polyhedra at the interface between the perovskite blocks. This results in intrinsically frustrated magnetic couplings between the perovskite blocks due to a competition of the exchange interactions between the edge- and the corner-sharing metal-oxygen polyhedra. Despite the magnetic frustration, neutron powder diffraction and Mössbauer spectroscopy reveal that Pb(2.9)Ba(2.1)Fe(4)TiO(13) and Pb(3.8)Bi(0.2)Ba(2)Fe(4.2)Ti(1.8)O(16) are antiferromagnetically ordered below T(N) = 407 and 343 K, respectively. The Pb(2.9)Ba(2.1)Fe(4)TiO(13) and Pb(3.8)Bi(0.2)Ba(2)Fe(4.2)Ti(1.8)O(16) compounds are in a paraelectric state in the 5-300 K temperature range.
The diversification of antiferromagnetic (AFM) oxides with high Néel temperature is of fundamental as well as technical interest if one considers the need for robust AFM in the field of spin-tronics (exchange bias, multiferroics, etc.). Within the broad series of so-called hexagonal perovskites (HP), the existence of face-sharing octahedral units drastically lowers the strength of magnetic exchanges as compared to corner-sharing octahedral edifices. Here, we show that the partial introduction of F(-) in several Fe-based HP types leads to a drastic increase of the AFM ordering close to the highest values reported in iron oxides (T(N) ≈ 700 K). Our experimental results are supported by ab initio calculations. The T(N) increase is explained by the structural effect of the aliovalent F(-) for O(2-) substitution occurring in preferred anionic positions: it leads to local changes of the Fe-O-Fe connectivity and to chemical reduction into predominant Fe(3+), both responsible for drastic magnetic changes.
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