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Cosmic strings in hematite

Professor Paolo G. Radaelli OSI

Dr Lee's Professor

Research theme

  • Quantum materials

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Oxide electronics
Paolo.Radaelli@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)70957
Clarendon Laboratory, room 111
  • About
  • Research
  • Publications

Prof Radaelli recognised with an MPLS "Excellent Supervisor" Award

Physics Award Winners
Prof Radaelli is one of the 5 Oxford Physicists recognised in the inaugural "Excellence in Research Supervision" award

Read the story at this link

Excellence in Research Supervision

Evidence of apical oxygen in Nd2CuOy determined by single-crystal neutron diffraction.

Phys Rev B Condens Matter 49:21 (1994) 15322-15326

Authors:

PG Radaelli, JD Jorgensen, AJ Schultz, JL Peng, RL Greene
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Miscibility gap in electrochemically oxygenated La2CuO4+ delta.

Phys Rev B Condens Matter 49:9 (1994) 6239-6245

Authors:

PG Radaelli, JD Jorgensen, R Kleb, BA Hunter, FC Chou, DC Johnston
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Pressure-induced structural changes in superconducting HgBa2Can-1CunO2n+2+δ (n = 1, 2, 3) compounds

Physica C: Superconductivity and its applications 221:1-2 (1994) 1-10

Authors:

BA Hunter, JD Jorgensen, JL Wagner, PG Radaelli, DG Hinks, H Shaked, RL Hitterman, RB Von Dreele

Abstract:

The crystal structures of superconducting HgBa2CuO4+δ and HgBa2CaCu2O6+δ have been investigated with a pressure up to 0.6 GPa and HgBa2Ca2Cu3O8+δ to 9.2 GPa by neutron powder diffraction. The compressibility along the c-axis is nearly the same for the three compounds and up to two times larger than the compressibility along the a-axis. The one-layer compound, HgBa2CuO4+δ, shows the largest a-axis compressibility, while HgBa2Ca2Cu3O4+δ shows the smallest compressibility. The bond compressibilities of HgBa2CuO4+δ and HgBa2CaCu2O6+δ are significantly different from HgBa2Ca2Cu3O8+δ bond compressibilities. In the one- and two-layer compounds the largest bond compressibility was the Cu-O2 (apical) bond distance, while for the three-layer compound it was the Hg-O2 bond distance. © 1994.
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Roles of oxygen defects in copper oxide superconductors

Journal of Superconductivity 7:1 (1994) 145-149

Authors:

JD Jorgensen, PG Radaelli, H Shaked, JL Wagner, BA Hunter, JF Mitchell, RL Hitterman, DG Hinks

Abstract:

Oxygen vacancy and interstitial defects can have a profound effect on the superconducting properties of copper oxide compounds. Recent work on compounds such as La2CuO4+x and HgBa2CuO4+x has provided new insight into the role of interstitial oxygen defects as a doping mechanism. The number of carriers created by each interstitial defect depends on the local defect structure. Studies of (La, Sr, Ca)3Cu2O6+x with various metal compositions and metalsite ordering show that interstitial oxygen defects that form between the CuO2 layers in this structure systematically lower Tc and eventually destroy superconductivity. Conversely, oxygen vacancies in the CuO2 planes have surprisingly little effect at concentrations below 3%. The infinite-layer compounds, ACuO2, where A=La, Sr, Ca, Nd, etc., in solid-solution combinations, could offer a similar environment for the formation of interstitial oxygen defects between the CuO2 planes, allowing interstitial oxygen defects to contribute to the doping of these compounds. However, neutron diffraction experiments on Sr0.9La0.1CuO2 (Tc = 42 K) have not found any interstitial oxygen. © 1994 Plenum Publishing Corporation.
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Structural and superconducting properties of La2-xSrxCuO4 as a function of Sr content.

Phys Rev B Condens Matter 49:6 (1994) 4163-4175

Authors:

PG Radaelli, DG Hinks, AW Mitchell, BA Hunter, JL Wagner, B Dabrowski, KG Vandervoort, HK Viswanathan, JD Jorgensen
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