Affiliation:
1. University Estadual Paulista (UNESP)
2. UNESP
Abstract
Since the discovery of high-temperature superconductivity of cuprate oxides, it has been
clear that it is strongly affected by the oxygen content, which is also a crucial factor to determine
other physical properties of high Tc superconductors. Non-stoichiometric (interstitial) oxygen
strongly influences the physical properties of various superconducting oxides, in particular by
creating conducting holes. It is now ascertained that the amount of holes injected depends not only
on the content of interstitial oxygen, but also on its ordering. Rearrangement of the oxygen ordering
may occur even below room temperature due to the unusual high mobility of these atoms. This
way, mechanical spectroscopy is one of the most adequate techniques for the study of the mobility
(diffusion) of oxygen atoms. This technique allows the determination of the jump frequency of an
atomic species precisely, regardless of the model or the different possible types of jumps. In order
to evaluate the mobility and the effect of oxygen content on these oxides, ceramic samples we
prepared and submitted to several oxygen removal cycles alternately with mechanical relaxation
measurements. As for SBCO, it was assumed that the peak was due to O(1)-O(5) jumps of oxygen
atoms at the chain terminals or in chain fragments in the orthorhombic phase. In the case of
BSCCO, the results showed complex anelastic relaxation structures, which were attributed to
interstitial oxygen atom jumps between two adjacent CuO planes.
Publisher
Trans Tech Publications, Ltd.
Subject
Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science,Radiation