A study of the structure-composition-properties correlation is reported for the oxygen-deficient SrFeCoO (x = 0.1-0.85) materials. The introduction of Co in the parent SrFeO (SrFeO) structure revealed an interesting structural transformation. At room temperature (RT), an orthorhombic (space group Cmmm, 2√2a × 2a × √2a type, a = lattice parameter of the cubic perovskite) → tetragonal (space group P4/mmm, a × a × 2a type) → tetragonal (space group I4/mmm, 2a × 2a × 4a type) structural transformation is observed in parallel with increasing Co content and decreasing oxygen content in the structure. At the same time, a rich variation in the magnetic properties is explored. The samples with x = 0.25, 0.3 show temperature-induced magnetization reversal. With increasing Co content in the structure, magnetic interactions start to weaken due to the random distribution of Fe and Co in the structure; the x = 0.5 sample shows frustration in the magnetic behavior with much smaller magnetization value. With a further increase in the Co content in the structure, RT ferrimagnetic-type behavior is observed for the sample with x = 0.85. The nuclear and magnetic structure refinements using RT and low-temperature neutron powder diffraction (NPD, 10 K) patterns confirm the formation of a "314-type" novel oxygen vacancy ordered phase for the sample with x = 0.85, which is the first case of "314-type" novel oxygen vacancy ordering without A-site (ABO type perovskite) ordering. The magnetic structure is G-type antiferromagnetic starting at room temperature. Further, the stabilization of the "314-type" complex superstructure is related to the ordering of oxygen vacancies in the oxygen-deficient Co-O layers, and the same assists in building a network of Co ions with different coordination environments, each with different spin states, and forms the spin-state ordering.
The half-metallic ferromagnet K(2)Cr(8)O(16) with the hollandite structure has been chemically modified using soft chemistry methods to increase the average oxidation state of chromium. The synthesis of the parent material has been performed under high pressure/high temperature conditions. Following this, different redox reactions have been carried out on K(2)Cr(8)O(16). Oxidation to obtain potassium-de-inserted derivatives, K(2-x)Cr(8)O(16) (0 ≤x≤ 1), has been investigated with electrochemical methods, while the synthesis of sizeable amounts was achieved chemically by using nitrosonium tetrafluoroborate as a highly oxidizing agent. The maximum amount of extracted K ions corresponds to x = 0.8. Upon oxidation the hollandite structure is maintained and the products keep high crystallinity. The de-insertion of potassium changes the Cr(3+)/Cr(4+) ratio, and therefore the magnetic properties. Interestingly, the Curie temperature increases from ca. 175 K to 250 K, getting therefore closer to room temperature.
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