Issue 19, 2004

The pyrochlore family – a potential panacea for the frustrated perovskite chemist

Abstract

Many known complex oxides of general formula A2B2X7 adopt the pyrochlore structure, a key structure-type that has been shown to demonstrate a vast range of useful physical properties. Areas currently of much interest with respect to pyrochlores, include metal–insulator transitions, magnetic frustration/spin ices, magnetoresistance, superconductivity, ferroelectrics, O/F ionic conductivity, mixed conductivity, pigments and catalysis. We present some recent results on three types of pyrochlore materials that show unusual magnetic, optical and electronic behaviours associated with subtle structural and compositional changes. High-resolution powder neutron diffraction studies of the superconducting Cd2Re2O7 and the ferroelectric Cd2Nb2O7 have been undertaken on material cooled below room temperature. Both Cd2Re2O7 and Cd2Nb2O7 exhibit small structure distortions, in each case involving a distortion from a cubic unit cell, on cooling below ∼180 K and possible models that can be used to describe the low-temperature structures and associated atomic displacements are developed and described in this article. A range of materials of the general formula Ca1−xLnxTaO2−xN1+x, x = 0.5 and x = 1, Ln = La–Yb have been synthesised and shown to adopt pyrochlore and/or perovskite structures. The absorption spectra of these materials are discussed in terms of their structures and compositions.

Graphical abstract: The pyrochlore family – a potential panacea for the frustrated perovskite chemist

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 Feb 2004
Accepted
02 Apr 2004
First published
23 Jul 2004

Dalton Trans., 2004, 3032-3041

The pyrochlore family – a potential panacea for the frustrated perovskite chemist

M. T. Weller, R. W. Hughes, J. Rooke, C. S. Knee and J. Reading, Dalton Trans., 2004, 3032 DOI: 10.1039/B401787K

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