Abstract

Electrical resistivity, magnetic susceptibility, thermogravimetric analysis, and infrared absorption spectra of the compound ${\mathrm{La}}_{2\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}\mathrm{x}}$${\mathrm{Sr}}_{\mathrm{x}}$${\mathrm{CuO}}_{4\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}\mathrm{\ensuremath{\delta}}}$ have been studied for a wide range of Sr concentrations (0.0\ensuremath{\le}x\ensuremath{\le}1.2). The samples annealed at an oxygen pressure of 1 bar were stoichiometric (\ensuremath{\delta}=0.0) in the range 0.0<x<0.33. In this range the compounds are characterized by a decrease in the a parameter, an increase in the c parameter, and a maximum in the c/a ratio (at x=0.33) typical of the formation of low-spin ${\mathrm{Cu}}^{3+}$ ions. In the range 0.15<x<0.33, the compounds show a positive temperature coefficient of resistivity, decrease in the magnitude of the Pauli magnetic susceptibility, infrared oscillator strengths, thermopower S, as well as the Hall coefficient ${R}_{H}$. The superconducting transition temperature ${T}_{c}$ as well as the percentage Meissner fraction also decrease with x in this range. In particular the stoichiometric x=0.33 composition having a hole concentration of \ensuremath{\sim}0.33 holes/Cu shows a minimum in the Pauli magnetic susceptibility and disappearance of all infrared absorption bands. The superconductivity also disappears down to 4.2 K at this composition, even though it is more metallic. These results have been attributed to the occurrence of a transition from a highly correlated narrow-band ``Mott conductor'' to a broadband metal at high carrier concentrations. At still higher Sr concentrations (0.33<x<1.0), holes and oxygen vacancies coexist. The decrease in the c/a ratio, increase in resistivity, reappearance of the infrared bands, and the Curie-type magnetic susceptibility observed in the range 0.66\ensuremath{\le}x\ensuremath{\le}1.2 indicate the dominating role of oxygen vacancies which induce disorder and localization.

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