A New High-Temperature Superconductor: Bi <sub>2</sub> Sr <sub>3-x</sub> Ca <sub>x</sub> Cu <sub>2</sub> O <sub>8+y</sub>

M. A. Subramanian(DuPont (United States)), C.C. Torardi(DuPont (United States)), J. C. CALABRESE(DuPont (United States)), J. Gopalakrishnan(DuPont (United States)), K. J. Morrissey(DuPont (United States)), T.R. Askew(DuPont (United States)), R. B. Flippen(DuPont (United States)), U. Chowdhry(DuPont (United States)), A.W. Sleight(DuPont (United States))
Science
February 26, 1988
Cited by 741

Abstract

A new superconductor that displays onset behavior near 120 K has been identified as Bi(2)Sr(3-x)Ca(x)Cu(2)O(8+y), with x ranging from about 0.4 to 0.9. Single crystal x-ray diffraction data were used to determine a pseudo-tetragonal structure based on an A-centered orthorhombic subcell with a = 5.399 A, b= 5.414A, and c = 30.904 A. The structure contains copper-oxygen sheets as in La(2)CuO(4) and YBa(2)Cu(3)O(7), but the copper-oxygen chains present in YBa(2)Cu(3)O(7) do not occur in Bi(2)Sr(3-x)Ca(x)Cu(2)O(8+y). The structure is made up of alternating double copper-oxygen sheets and double bismuth-oxygen sheets. There are Ca(2+) and Sr(2+) cations between the adjacent Cu-O sheets; Sr(2+) cations are also found between the Cu-O and Bi-O sheets. Electron microscopy studies show an incommensurate superstructure along the a axis that can be approximated by an increase of a factor of 5 over the subcell dimension. This superstructure is also observed by x-ray diffraction on single crystals, but twinning can make it appear that the superstructure is along both a and b axes. Flux exclusion begins in our samples at about 116 K and is very strong by 95 K. Electrical measurements on a single crystal of Bi(2)Sr(3-x)Ca(x)Cu(2)O(8+y) show a resistivity drop at about 116 K and apparent zero resistivity at 91 K.


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