Giant magnetoresistance (GMR) and related properties of manganate perovskites of the general formula Lnl − xAxMnO3 (Ln = rare earth; A = divalent ion) are discussed in detail. There is a fine interplay of magnetic exchange, structural properties and electronic transport in these materials which gives rise to several novel properties. The manganates are ferromagnetic at or above a certain value of x (or Mn4+ content) and become metallic at temperatures below the curie temperature, T
c
. This behavior is attributed to double-exchange. GMR is generally a maximum close to T
c
or the insulator-metal (I-M) transition temperature, T
im
. The T
c
and %MR are markedly affected by the size of the A site cation, 〈 r
A
〉, thereby affording a useful electronic phase diagram when T
c
or T
im
is plotted against 〈 r
A
〉 or pressure. The commonalities and correlations found in the properties of manganates are examined along with certain unusual features in the electron-transport properties of these materials. Some of the Ln1 − xAxMnO3 compositions exhibit charge-ordering and related effects. Charge ordering is crucially dependent on 〈 r
A
〉 or the eg band width and the charge-ordered insulating state transforms to a metallic ferromagnetic state on the application of a magnetic field, charge-ordering and double-exchange being competing interactions.
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