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Journal article

Low-Temperature Structure and Magnetic Properties of the Spinel LiMn2O4: A Frustrated Antiferromagnet and Cathode Material

Abstract

Powder neutron diffraction has been used to study the nature of the structural transition away from the Fd3m cubic structure upon cooling below ∼285 K in the spinel LiMn2O4. We report powder data taken between 10 K and 333 K and propose a large cell tetragonal structure in space group I41/amd for the material at 100 K. While complete segregation of the Mn3+ and Mn4+ ions is not possible in this space group, bond-valence analysis indicates that the distribution of Mn3+ and Mn4+ ions is not random and that there is a degree of charge segregation. Further, LiMn2O4 is also of interest because it is an example of a geometrically frustrated antiferromagnet. Direct current magnetic susceptibility measurements show field-cooled, zero-field-cooled irreversibility at ∼65 K and a maximum in zero-field-cooled data at ∼40 K. Neutron diffraction shows magnetic scattering in the form of a broad peak assigned to short-range order which develops above 100 K. Upon cooling to 60 K additional Bragg peaks are seen, signaling long-range magnetic order. The Bragg peaks grow at the expense of the diffuse feature on cooling to 10 K but the latter persists even at the lowest temperature studied which indicates that a significant fraction of the spins still remain disordered. The magnetic Bragg peaks index on a tetragonal cell which is 2a, 2b, and 4c with respect to the low-temperature tetragonal cell and contains 1152 spins. The large size and implied complexity of the magnetic structure is consistent with both charge segregation and significant further neighbor exchange interactions.

Authors

Wills AS; Raju NP; Greedan JE

Journal

Chemistry of Materials, Vol. 11, No. 6, pp. 1510–1518

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Publication Date

June 1, 1999

DOI

10.1021/cm981041l

ISSN

0897-4756

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