Publication | Closed Access
Mn<sub>2</sub>TeO<sub>6</sub>: a Distorted Inverse Trirutile Structure
14
Citations
32
References
2017
Year
Inverse trirutile Mn<sub>2</sub>TeO<sub>6</sub> was investigated using in situ neutron and X-ray powder diffraction between 700 °C and room temperature. When the temperature was decreased, a structural phase transition was observed around 400 °C, from a tetragonal (P4<sub>2</sub>/mnm) to a monoclinic phase (P2<sub>1</sub>/c), involving a doubling of the cell parameter along b. This complex monoclinic structure has been solved by combining electron, neutron, and synchrotron powder diffraction techniques at room temperature. It can be described as a distorted superstructure of the inverse trirutile structure, in which compressed and elongated MnO<sub>6</sub> octahedra alternate with more regular TeO<sub>6</sub> octahedra, forming a herringbone-like pattern. Rietveld refinements, carried out with symmetry-adapted modes, show that the structural transition, arguably of Jahn-Teller origin, is driven by a single primary mode.
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