Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9830183 | Journal of Crystal Growth | 2005 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Rare-earth manganites with divalent doping have attracted attention because of their interesting physical phenomena. Manganites, doped with divalent lead, are grown from solvent PbO-PbF2. Single crystals of R1âxPbxMnO3 and mixed rare-earth (RyRâ²1ây)1âxPbxMnO3, where Râ², R=La, Nd and Pr are grown with different values of x using eutectic composition of PbO: PbF2 as solvent. Growth temperature can then be significantly reduced. Optimized charge-to-flux ratio 1:6 yields large crystals with dimension up to 4Ã3Ã2Â mm3. A variety of surface features such as hillocks, micro and macro step patterns, dendrites as well as clear featureless surfaces are observed on as-grown crystals. Clear surfaces reveal that growth occurred predominantly by two-dimensional layer growth mechanism. The hillocks might have originated at the site of screw dislocation, which suggests the growth mechanism at low supersaturation. Hopper growth observed on a few crystals is suggestive of unstable growth. Optimum growth parameters are employed to achieve better yield and good quality crystals.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Condensed Matter Physics
Authors
Nilotpal Ghosh, B. Padmanabhan, Suja Elizabeth, H.L. Bhat,