Layered perovskite CaNb0.8Ti0.2O3.33

Compounds of the homologous series AnBnO3n+2 (where A = Ca, La or SR and B = Ti or NB) with n = 4, 4.5, 5, 6, and 7 are interesting because of their physical and electronic properties. For some of them a charge density wave (CDW) has been proposed to develop at low temperatures, while others are fer...

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Main Authors: Guevarra, Jonathan, van Smaalen, Sander, Daniels, Peter, Lichtenberg, Frank
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Published: Animo Repository 2004
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/6445
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-72912022-07-26T02:38:01Z Layered perovskite CaNb0.8Ti0.2O3.33 Guevarra, Jonathan van Smaalen, Sander Daniels, Peter Lichtenberg, Frank Compounds of the homologous series AnBnO3n+2 (where A = Ca, La or SR and B = Ti or NB) with n = 4, 4.5, 5, 6, and 7 are interesting because of their physical and electronic properties. For some of them a charge density wave (CDW) has been proposed to develop at low temperatures, while others are ferroelectric materials. The ideal structure of these layered compounds, which can be derived from the perovskite structure, can be visualized as two alternating blocks of vertex-sharing BO6 octahedra separated by additional oxygen layer with A cations residing in the interblock cavities. The octahedral blocks are stacked along [110] of the ideal perovskite and their thickness is characterized by n. Consecutive blocks of octahedral are shifted with respect to each other by about half the octahedron body diagonal and B-O bond length leaving intrablock regions where the octahedral do not share two O atoms. In this study, crystals of CaNb0.8Ti0.2O3.33 (n=6) were grown by floating-zone melting and the crystal structure at room temperature was determined by single-crystal x-ray diffraction with synchrotron radiation using a CCD area detetctor. The compound crystallized with a monoclinic unit cell with a = 7.681(2) Å, b = 5.465(1) Å, c = 37.747(6) Å β = 95.87(1) o. The crystal structure was determined by direct methods using SIR2002, and the structure was refined using JAN2000. Particular attention is given to the different distortions of the (Nb,Ti)O6 octahedra near the center and on the borders of the slabs, the Nb,Ti order, and the different environments of the Ca atoms. 2004-03-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/6445 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Perovskite (Mineral)—Structure Crystallography Physics
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Perovskite (Mineral)—Structure
Crystallography
Physics
spellingShingle Perovskite (Mineral)—Structure
Crystallography
Physics
Guevarra, Jonathan
van Smaalen, Sander
Daniels, Peter
Lichtenberg, Frank
Layered perovskite CaNb0.8Ti0.2O3.33
description Compounds of the homologous series AnBnO3n+2 (where A = Ca, La or SR and B = Ti or NB) with n = 4, 4.5, 5, 6, and 7 are interesting because of their physical and electronic properties. For some of them a charge density wave (CDW) has been proposed to develop at low temperatures, while others are ferroelectric materials. The ideal structure of these layered compounds, which can be derived from the perovskite structure, can be visualized as two alternating blocks of vertex-sharing BO6 octahedra separated by additional oxygen layer with A cations residing in the interblock cavities. The octahedral blocks are stacked along [110] of the ideal perovskite and their thickness is characterized by n. Consecutive blocks of octahedral are shifted with respect to each other by about half the octahedron body diagonal and B-O bond length leaving intrablock regions where the octahedral do not share two O atoms. In this study, crystals of CaNb0.8Ti0.2O3.33 (n=6) were grown by floating-zone melting and the crystal structure at room temperature was determined by single-crystal x-ray diffraction with synchrotron radiation using a CCD area detetctor. The compound crystallized with a monoclinic unit cell with a = 7.681(2) Å, b = 5.465(1) Å, c = 37.747(6) Å β = 95.87(1) o. The crystal structure was determined by direct methods using SIR2002, and the structure was refined using JAN2000. Particular attention is given to the different distortions of the (Nb,Ti)O6 octahedra near the center and on the borders of the slabs, the Nb,Ti order, and the different environments of the Ca atoms.
format text
author Guevarra, Jonathan
van Smaalen, Sander
Daniels, Peter
Lichtenberg, Frank
author_facet Guevarra, Jonathan
van Smaalen, Sander
Daniels, Peter
Lichtenberg, Frank
author_sort Guevarra, Jonathan
title Layered perovskite CaNb0.8Ti0.2O3.33
title_short Layered perovskite CaNb0.8Ti0.2O3.33
title_full Layered perovskite CaNb0.8Ti0.2O3.33
title_fullStr Layered perovskite CaNb0.8Ti0.2O3.33
title_full_unstemmed Layered perovskite CaNb0.8Ti0.2O3.33
title_sort layered perovskite canb0.8ti0.2o3.33
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2004
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/6445
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