Effect of The Number of Holes Psh and Heat Treatments on the Critical Temperature Tc in High Tc Superconductors

DOI : 10.17577/IJERTV6IS120082

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Effect of The Number of Holes Psh and Heat Treatments on the Critical Temperature Tc in High Tc Superconductors

Mohammed Bellioua, Abdelhakim Nafidi, Essediq Youssef El Yakoubi, Abdeljabar Aboulkassim, Rachid Ben Koujan

Laboratory of Condensed Matter Physics and Nanomaterials for Renewable Energy, Faculty of sciences, University Ibn Zohr, 80000 Agadir, Morocco

Abstract We report here on the preparation, X-ray diffraction with Rietveld refinement and the effect of heat treatments in Y1-xSmxBaSrCu3O6+z. Each sample was subject to two types of heat treatment: oxygen annealing [O] and argon annealing followed by oxygen annealing [AO]. When x increase from 0 to 1, the ratio a/b increases and Tc[O] decreases. However, Tc[AO] decreases until x=0.2 and after it increases with a/b by 5.3 K to 84.6 K for x=1 [AO]. Note that the crystalline parameter b is constant but a (and c) increases indicating an increase of the number of oxygen atoms by chain (NOC) along a leading to a decreases of a/b(Tc)[O] toward a tetragonal structure. For each x, the [A0] heat treatment decreases a/b (for 0 x 1), Tc (for x>0.4). Note that for x=0.4, the surface of the sample s[O]=s[AO] with Tc[O]Tc[AO]=81.4

  1. Remarkable correlations were observed. A combination of

    several factors such as the decrease in d[Cu(2)-Cu (1)]; the increase in cationic and oxygen chain order; the effect of the number of holes psh in the Cu(2)O2 plans and in-phase purity for the [AO] samples may account the observed data.

    Keywords High-Tc superconductors, Heat treatments, holes psh, Tc,surface ab, distance d[Cu(1)-Cu(2)], X- ray diffraction.

    1. INTRODUCTION

      The substitution of different atoms in the high critical temperature superconductor YBa2Cu3O6+z is an important method for obtaining essential information about superconductivity. The effects of these substitutions affect the number of the holes p in the Cu(2)O2 superconducting plane. It has been proved experimentally that the optimum Cu(2)O2 plane conditions in these cuprites are the result of the effect of these holes to attain a high critical temperature [1-4].

      Several authors show that the critical temperature depends only on the ionic size of rare earth in the samples LnBaSrCu3O6+z (Ln rare earth) [5-7]. We have studied the structural and superconducting properties of the superconductor SmSrBaCu3O6+z [8]. This compound when annealed in oxygen at 450°C showed a tetragonal structure and a Tc of 79 K. When the same sample was heated in argon followed by oxygen annealing; we observed an orthorhombic structure and an increase of Tc by 6 K. So Tc depends also on heat treatment.

      In order to study the role played by the yttrium and barium planes, and to find out the factors and conditions

      which govern the superconductivity in these compounds; we have investigated the structural and superconducting properties of (Y1xSmx)(SrBa)Cu3O6+z. Indeed, we found that the influence of argon heat treatment on these properties depended on the concentration of Sm(x) and Tc depends on the number of holes psh in the Cu(2)O2 plans.

    2. EXPERIMENTAL TECHNIQUES.

      The polycrystalline samples have been prepared by solid-state sintering of the respective oxides and carbonates. The chemicals were of 99.999% purity except in the case of BaCO3 which was 99.99% pure. Sm2O3, SrCO3, BaCO3 and CuO were thoroughly mixed in required proportions and calcined at 950°C in air for a period of 12-18h. The resulting product was ground, pelletized and heated in air at 980°C for a period 16-24h. This was repeated twice. The pellets were annealing in oxygen at 450°C for a period of 60-72h and furnace cooled. This was denoted as sample [O] for each x. XRD data of the sample ware collected with Philips diffractometer fitted with a secondary beam graphite monochromator and using CuK (40 kV/20 mA) radiation. The angle 2 was varied from 20° to 120° in steps of 0.025° and the courting time per step was 10 sec. The XRD specters were refined with Rietveld refinement [9].

      Superconducting transitions were checked by measuring both the real and the imaginary parts of the AC susceptibility as a function of temperature in a field of 0.11 Oe and at a frequency of 1500 Hz.

      For each x, the same sample [O] was then heated in argon at 850°C for about 12h, cooled to 20°C and oxygen was allowed to flow instead of argon and the sample was annealed at 450°C for about 72h. This sample is denoted as [AO]. XRD and AC susceptibility measurements were performed on a part of this sample.

    3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

      As example, the measured XRD patterns and calculated with Rietveld refinement in the case of SmSrBaCu3O6+z ([O] and [AO]) are shown in figure 1. In general the samples were well crystallized and the reflections were sharper after the [AO] heat treatment. The orthorhombic splitting was also influenced by the [AO] treatment. Some weak unidentified impurity peaks (at 2=31°) were seen

      in the [O] samples. They disappeared after the [AO] heat treatment. This indicates an improvement of crystallographic quality of the samples [AO].

      Fig. 1 : XRD pattern of SmSrBaCu3O6+z, observed, calculated with Rietveld refinement and difference profiles for sample [O] and sample [AO].

      In order to determine the coordinates of these atoms (i.e. the positions of the atoms in the unit cell), we chosen the reference (a,b,c) with origin at Y/Sm site. The atoms of the basal plan have the following fixed coordinated: Cu(1) (0.5,0.5,0.5), O(4) (0,0.5,0.5) and O(5)(0.5,0,0.5), while

      those of the other atoms O(1), O(2), O(3), Cu(2) and Sr/Ba vary along the z axis. The positions of the atoms in Y1-xSmxSrBaCu3O6+z are schematized in figure 2.

      Figure 3 illustrates the evolution of the lattice parameters a, b, c, the surface s as function of the x(Sm) and the heat treatment. Figure3. (a) shows that the two curves c[O] and c[AO] are identical. It indicates that the parameter c does not depend on the heat treatment but depends only on the composition x(Sm). The parameter c increases with x in agreement with the fact that r(Sm3+)=0.965 Ã… is superior to that r(Y3+)= 0.893 Ã….

      The effect of the heat treatment on the surface s(x) =ab of the unit cell is remarkable. The figure 3(b) shows that s[AO]>s[O] for x0,5 with Tc[AO]<Tc[O]. This effect is reversed for x > 0.5. We notice that for x=0.4 s[AO] =s[O] with Tc[AO] =81.5K almost equal to Tc [O] =81.3K. These results show that TC depends on the surface s, i.e. of order/disorder of oxygen in the basal plane. We also have obtained the same curve of Tc as function of s and the volum as a function of x and the heat treatment in figure 5. This shows again that the heat treatment does not influence the parameter c.

      Figure 4(a) shows the a/b ratio as function of x (Sm) and the heat treatment. The increase of a/b[O] from 0.983 (ab) for x = 0 to 0.9971 (with a=b) for x = 1 indicates a structural phase transition from orthorhombic to tetragonal. While for the samples [AO], a/b[AO] increases slowly from 0.9804 for

      Fig. 2 : The unit cell of the compound Y1-xSmxSrBaCu3O6+z.

      x=0 (for YBaSrCu3O6+z) to 0.9896 for x=1 (SmBaSrCu3O6+z) with an orthorhombic symmetry. For each x, the heat treatment [AO] decreases the a/b ratio. Thus, the heat treatment influences the parameters a and b, but not c, i.e. the order/disorder of oxygen in the basal plan ab, and consequently impacts the number of the holes in the Cu(2)O2 copper planes. When x increase from 0 to 1, the a/b[O] ratio increases and Tc[O] decreases as seen in Figure 4(b).

      11,7

      (a)

      c (Ã…)

      11,6

      11,5

      p>b (Ã…)

      3,85

      a (Ã…)

      [O] [A,O]

      3,80

      0,0 0,2 0,4 0,6 0,8 1,0

      x (Sm)

      14.85 (b)

      14.80

      s=ab (Ã…2)

      14.75

      14.70

      14.65

      14.60

      14.55

      ab(O)

      ab(AO)

      The existence of the plateau for 0.12 < psh < 0.25, in which the critical temperature is maximal (=1) [1], is observed experimentally. Particularly in the universal correlation between Tc and ns/m* (the ratio of the density of the holes and the effective mass) given by Uemura et al [10]. An increase in Tc, of a system to another, is related to a decrease of m* and an increase of nS.

      A correlation between the critical temperature and the oxygen arrangement in the layers of head tank for the compound (Cu,C)Ba2Ca2Cu3O9- was given by N. Iliev et al. [11]. It is based on the fact that the variation of the rate of oxygen in these layers influences the content of the holes

      0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0

      x(Sm)

      Fig. 3 : Variation of the parameters a, b and c (a) and surface s (b) of Y1- xSmxSrBaCu3O6+z as function of x and the heat treatment.

      (a)

      0.995

      a/b

      0.990

      0.985

      0.980

      a/b [O]

      (psh) in the plans of conduction Cu(2)O2. Thus, M. R. Presland et al [12] obtained a parabolic relation. between Tc standardized c = Tc/Tcmax and the concentration of the holes psh.

      Typically, when doping rises from p=0.06 the critical temperature Tc increases from zero to attain its maximal value Tcmax at p=0.16. This is accompanied by the reduction of the pseudo gap energy Eg du to the depression in electron density of states. At critical doping level p=0.25, the pseudo gap phase eventually vanishes and further increase of doping is characterized by decrease of Tc and disappearance of superconductivity at p0.30.

      The following empirical relationship between Tc and p has been found in experiments to hold for a wide class of high Tc cuprates. The determination of psh, is estimated by

      equation (1) from the Tc measured in a sample, where Tcmax

      0.975

      85

      a/b [AO]

      0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0

      x(Sm)

      is 93K in the case of cuprates [13].

      Tc(psh)=Tcmax[1-82.6(psh-0.16)2] (1)

      We have obtained a correlation between the number of the holes psh and the critical temperature Tc as function of

      T (K)

      c

      x=0

      (b)

      T [O]

      c

      T [AO]

      c

      x=0

      x=1

      x=0.2

      x(Sm) and the heat treatment in Y1-xSmxBaSrCu3O6+z in (figure 6).

      The distance d[Cu(2)-Cu(1)] between the copper Cu(2) of the Cu(2)O2 plan and the copper Cu(1) of the chains as function of x and the heat treatment is shown in the figure

      1. We obtained a remarkable correlation between the inverse of this distance (d-1[Cu(1)-Cu(2)]) with Tc as a function of x and the heat treatment as seen in figure 8. In

        x=0.2

        80

        x=1

        the unit cell (figure.2), the copper Cu(1) is fixed; therefore, the variation of this distance is the result of the displacement of copper Cu(2) along z.

        For a given heat treatment, when the critical

        0.980 0.985 0.990 0.995

        a/b

        Fig. 4 : (a):The a/b ratio of Y1-xSmxSrBaCu3O6+z as function of x and the heat treatment. (b): Variation of the ratio a/b as a function of Tc and heat treatments of Y1-xSmxSrBaCu3O6+z.

        The high critical temperature Tc of superconductors oxides strongly depends on the concentration of the holes on the two-dimensional layers Cu(2)O2. The universal relation between standardized Tc (c=Tc/Tcmax) and the concentration psh of the holes in the Cu(2)O2 plane of superconductors oxides (La214 , Y123, Bi2212, Bi2223, Tl2201 and Tl1212)

        shows that Tc independent of the considered sample [1].

        temperature Tc(x) increases the distance d[Cu(1)-Cu(2)](x) decreases (d-1[Cu(1)-Cu(2)] (x) increases) in Figure 7 and

      2. The attraction force via the apical oxygen O(1) intermediate makes it possible to increase Tc. This apical oxygen plays the role the bridges linking charge reservoir and CuO2 conducting layers for highs superconductors (HTS) [14].

      The reduction of number of holes in the CuO2 planes makes it possible to increase the parameter c in Y1- xSmxBaSrCu3O6+z [O] (Figure. 9). It is the same behavior of the figure obtained by Ruixing Liang et al [2] in the case the doping p of YBa2Cu3O6+z as a function of the lattice

      parameter c. The c-direction unit cell length is the sum of bond lengths, c = 2d[Cu(1)-O(1)]+d[Cu(2)- Cu(2)]+2d[Cu(2)- O(1)]. The change in c is mainly caused

      V( Ã…3 )

      168 169 170 171 172 173

      This also shows that the role played by the number of holes.

      The critical temperature Tc varies as a function of the n number of Cu(2)O2 planes in Ba2Can-1(CuO2)n(O,F)2 [4]. It is maximal for n = 3 and constant from n = 5. It is evident that the crystal parameter c increases with the number n of the Cu(2)O2 planes. This increase is linear in the case of Sr2Can-1

      Tc(V)[O]

      T (K)

      c

      84 Tc(V)[AO]

      82

      80 Tc(s)[O]

      Tc(s)[AO]

      14.6 14.7 14.8 s(Ã…2)

      (b)

      CunOy (n = 3-7)[16]. Piyamas Chainok et al [17] synthesized the YBamCu1+mO(2m+3)-x superconductors; m = 2, 3, 4, 5 that were Y123, Y134, Y145 and Y156 by solid state reaction. They found that the Tconset of Y123, Y134, Y145 and Y156 were at 97, 93, 91 and 85 K. The Y123 has two CuO2 planes and one CuO chain. In 2009, Aliabadi et al [18] synthesized

      Y358 (Y3Ba5Cu8O18) superconductor by solid state reaction that becomes superconducting above 100 K with the lattice parameters a = 3.888 , b = 3.823 , c = 31.013 . The Y358 has crystal structure similar to Y123 with five CuO2 planes and three CuO chains. So, the increase in the number n of Cu(2)O2 planes and Cu(1)O chain have important effect on the Tc of YBaCuO superconductors.

      Isovalent substitution doping (here substitution of Y+3 by

      Fig. 5 : The critical temperature as function of the volume, the surface of the unit cell and the heat treatment in (Y1-xSmx)BaSrCu3O6+z.

      Tc[O]

      Sm+3) changes the number of holes in the Cu(2)O2 plans, the chemical substitution unavoidably introduces disorder into the crystalline lattice due to random distribution of dopant

      84 Tc[AO]

      Tc(K)

      82

      80

      psh[O] psh[AO]

      0,125

      psh

      0,120

      4,10

      d[Cu(2)-Cu(1)] (Ã…)

      4,05

      d[Cu(2)-Cu(1)] [O]

      d[Cu(2)-Cu(1)] [AO]

      0,0 0,2 0,4 0,6 0,8 1,0

      x(Sm)

      Fig. 6 : Correlation between the number of the holes psh the critical temperature as function of x(Sm) and the heat treatment in Y1-

      xSmxBaSrCu3O6+z.

      by the change in d[Cu(2)-O(1)] because it is much more sensitive to change in the oxygen content than other bond lengths [2]. This result can also be justified by the figures (6 and 8)[O], such that the parameter c[O] increases with the distance d[Cu(2)-Cu(1)][O]. Indeed the critical temperature Tc[O] and psh[O] increase when x decreases, but the distance d[Cu(2)-Cu(1)][O] decreases which also reduces the parameter c[O]. The parameter c increases when the oxygen content decreases in the basal plane of the samples REBa2Cu3Oy (RE=Gd, Er) [15].

      The latter decreases with the doping p [2]. The maximum critical temperature is obtained in the tetragonal structure with the constant crystal parameter a=0.385nm. In the compounds REBa2Cu3O7 (RE=rare-earth elements) Tc=92K

      [3] and in the compound SmBaSrCu3O6+z[O], Tc= 79.3K in the Cu(2)O2 plane on the superconducting property by the influence on the parameter a (a = 2dCu(2)-O(2) = 2dCu(2)-O(3)), compared with that obtained by Wang et al. [5] (Tc = 80K).

      0,0 0,2 0,4 0,6 0,8 1,0

      x(Sm)

      Fig. 7: The distance d[Cu(1)-Cu(2)] as function of x(Sm) and heat treatment in Y1-xSmxBaSrCu3O6+z

      atoms. The effect of the doping disorder on Tc has become a recent concern. This effect of holes p on Tc has been systematically studied for the cuprates based copper oxide supercondctors by several authors [1 ,19].

      This is identical to the model of transfer of the charge from the chains towards the Cu(2)O2 plans. Thus, Tc increases while d[Cu(2)-Cu(1)] decreases. Indeed, the increase in the holes in the Cu(2)O2 plan makes it possible to increase the force of repulsion between Cu2+ and (Y3+/Sm3+) cations which increase the distance d[Y/Sm_Cu(2)]. The Y/Sm atom is fixed in our unit cell while copper Cu(2) of plan moves towards copper Cu(1) of chain. Consequently, the distance d[Cu(1)-Cu(2)] decreases. The increase in holes in the Cu(2)O2 plane decreases this distance and increases the critical temperature Tc (Figures 6 and 8). Finally, the effect of the concentration

      of the mobile holes in the Cu(2)O2 plane, on the structural and superconducting properties, is quite remarkable in our samples.

      When x increases from 0 to 1, the cation and anion disorder increases (reduction of number Oxygen by Chain NOC [20]) in the samples [O]. Thus, the concentration psh of holes (or Tc) of these samples [O] decreases (figures 5 and 6). The treatment [AO] reduces the atomic disorders (increase in

      d-1[Cu(2)-Cu(1)] [O]

      attenuated and the orthorhombic structure is retained. For a given x, the heat treatment [AO] decreases a/b. This decrease increases with x. This is a sign of the reduction in the cation and anion disorders with x. When x increases from 0 to 1, Tc[O] decreases but a/b [O] increases. Then for x > 0.2, Tc [AO] and a/b[AO] increases as expected in RE123 [3].

    4. CONCLUSIONS

Our study is based on the research of the parameters which influence the structural and superconductive property in (Y1-xSmx)SrBaCu3O6+z. By using two heat treatments ([O] and [AO]), we have obtained different critical temperatures

in the same compound (T [O] T [AO]). For each x, the

d-1[Cu(2)-Cu(1)] [AO] 84 c c

d-1[Cu(2)-Cu(1)](Ã…-1)

0,247

0,246

0,245

0,244

T [O]

c

c

T [AO]

82

80

0,0 0,2 0,4 0,6 0,8 1,0

x(Sm)

a/b[O] ratio is higher than a/b[AO] ratio. Thus, the critical temperature Tc increases and a/b ratio decreases, except in the case of x0,2 for sample [AO], where a/b ratio increases with Tc .

T (K)

c

The heat treatment influences the parameters a and b, the

surface s, the a/b ratio and the critical temperature Tc. The variation of the parameters a, b, s and a/b influences the oxygen disorder in the basal plans (or NOC). The transfer of charge between the two coppers, Cu(2) of plane and Cu(1) of chain is effected by the insertion of oxygen in the basal plane or order/disorder oxygen on this plane, via the apical oxygen O(1). This is justified by the correlation between, the number

Fig. 8: The inverse of a distance d-1[Cu(1)-Cu(2)] and the critical temperature as function of x(Sm) and heat treatment in Y1-

xSmxBaSrCu3O6+z.

of the holes psh, the critical temperature Tc and the inverse distance d-1[Cu(1)-Cu(2)] as function of x(Sm) and heat treatments in Y1-xSmxBaSrCu3O6+z..

0,124

p

sh

0,122

0,120

0,118

1,156 1,158 1,160 1,162

c(nm)

Several factors like the change of the ionic ionic size of the rare earth Sm in YBaSrCu3O6+z , its disorder on the site (Sr/Ba), the oxygen order of the chains or the surface, atomic distances, heat treatment and the a/b ratio, influence the critical temperature Tc by intermediary of the number of the holes in the copper Cu(2)O2 plans. The parameter which governs the superconducting in our samples is the density of the holes in the Cu(2)O2 plans.

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