Abstract
The mixed-valence oxygen-deficient perovskite SrFeO2.710 has been prepared essentially free of other phases by lengthy annealing of rapidly quenched material. The Mössbauer spectra confirm the essential features of two distinct types of iron which can be assigned as Fe3+ and Fe4+ high-spin cations. The unusual characteristics of the spectra from the antiferromagnetic phase, and their similarity to those from Sr2LaFe3O8.417, have been interpreted in terms of a structural model with layers of Fe3+ in octahedral coordination separated by layers of Fe4+ in square-pyramidal coordination. Ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic superexchange interactions within the Fe4+ layers can lead to significant frustration and can explain the absence of magnetic hyperfine splitting from these cations below the ordering temperature where the Fe3+ cations show long-range coupling. The magnetism is therefore approximately two-dimensional in character.