Evolution of precipitate morphology during heat treatment and its implications for the superconductivity in KxFe1.6+ySe2 single crystals
| Title | Evolution of precipitate morphology during heat treatment and its implications for the superconductivity in KxFe1.6+ySe2 single crystals |
| Publication Type | Journal Article |
| Year of Publication | 2012 |
| Authors | Liu Y, Xing Q, Dennis KW, McCallum RW, Lograsso TA |
| Journal Title | Physical Review B |
| Volume | 86 |
| Pages | 144507 |
| Date Published | 10 |
| Type of Article | Article |
| ISBN Number | 1098-0121 |
| Accession Number | WOS:000309578100005 |
| Keywords | kxfe2-yse2, layered superconductor |
| Abstract | We study the relationship between precipitate morphology and superconductivity in KxFe1.6+ySe2 single crystals grown by self-flux method. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) measurements revealed that the superconducting phase forms a network in the samples quenched above iron vacancy order-disorder transition temperature T-s, whereas it aggregates into micrometer-sized rectangular bars and aligns as disconnected chains in the furnace-cooled samples. Accompanying this change in morphology the superconducting shielding fraction is strongly reduced. By post-annealing above T-s followed by quenching in room temperature water, the network recovers with a superconducting shielding fraction approaching 80% for the furnace-cooled samples. A reversible change from network to bar chains was realized by a secondary heat treatment in annealed samples showing a large shielding fraction, that is, heating above T-s followed by slow cooling across T-s. The large shielding fraction observed in KxFe1.6+ySe2 single crystals actually results from an uniform and contiguous distribution of superconducting phase. Through the measurements of temperature dependent x-ray diffraction, it is found that the superconducting phase precipitates while the iron vacancy ordered phase forms together by cooling across T-s in KxFe1.6+ySe2 single crystals. It is a solid solution above T-s, where iron atoms randomly occupy both Fe1 and Fe2 sites in the iron vacancy disordering status; and phase separation is driven by the iron vacancy order-disorder transition upon cooling. However, neither additional iron in the starting mixtures nor as-quenching at high temperatures can extend the miscibility gap to the KFe2Se2 side. |
| URL | <Go to ISI>://WOS:000309578100005 |
| DOI | 10.1103/PhysRevB.86.144507 |
| Alternate Journal | Phys. Rev. B |
















