Abstract

Complex transition-metal oxides exhibit a wide variety of chemical and physical properties which are a strong function the local electronic states of the transition-metal centres, as determined by a combination of metal oxidation state and local coordination environment. Topochemical reduction of the double perovskite oxide, LaSrCoRuO6 , using Zr, yields LaSrCoRuO5 . This reduced phase contains an ordered array of apex-linked square-based pyramidal Ru3+ O5 , square-planar Co1+ O4 and octahedral Co3+ O6 units, consistent with the coordination-geometry driven disproportionation of Co2+ . Coordination-geometry driven disproportionation of d7 transition-metal cations (e.g. Rh2+ , Pd3+ , Pt3+ ) is common in complex oxides containing 4d and 5d metals. However, the weak ligand field experienced by a 3d transition-metal such as cobalt leads to the expectation that d7+ Co2+ should be stable to disproportionation in oxide environments, so the presence of Co1+ O4 and Co3+ O6 units in LaSrCoRuO5 is surprising. Low-temperature measurements indicate LaSrCoRuO5 adopts a ferromagnetically ordered state below 120 K due to couplings between S=1 /2 Ru3+ and S=1 Co1+ .

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