Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10637054 | Solid State Sciences | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The nonstoichiometric ternary cerium iron sulfide Ce2Fe1.82(6)S5 was synthesized through reaction of the elements in a LiCl/KCl flux at 1120 K, and its structure was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Ce2Fe1.82S5 crystallizes in the polar orthorhombic space group Pmn21 with a=3.9590(2)Ã
, b=16.413(1)Ã
, c=11.2362(9)Ã
and Z=4. The structure is a defect variant of the La2Fe2S5 structure type. The parent structure contains both octahedral and tetrahedral iron sites, within one-dimensional chains of edge-sharing [FeSx]-polyhedra that run along the [100] direction. In Ce2Fe1.82S5, vacancies occur exclusively in the octahedral iron sites. The “tetrahedral” iron sites are split into three closely spaced partially occupied positions with coordination numbers of [4+1]. The presence of vacancies entails the partial oxidation of one of the cations to compensate the charge. The X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) of the Ce MIV,V edge of Ce2Fe1.82S5 showed no evidence of the occurrence of tetravalent cerium. The presence of Fe3+ was unambiguously established on the basis of hyperfine fields observed in a 57Fe-MöÃbauer spectrum at 4.2 K. The temperature dependence of the reciprocal magnetic susceptibility (Ïâ1) of Ce2Fe1.82S5 is nearly linear at higher temperatures. A rapid decrease in Ïâ1 below approximately 90 K suggests a ferrimagnetic transition.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
Wiebke Harms, Allison M. Mills, Tilo Söhnel, Clemens Laubschat, Friedrich E. Wagner, Christoph Geibel, Zakir Hossain, Michael Ruck,