6533b7d8fe1ef96bd126ae08

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Diindeno-fusion of an anthracene as a design strategy for stable organic biradicals

Iratxe Arrechea-marcosKotaro FukudaRocío Ponce OrtizHenrik OttossonLev N. ZakharovGabriel E. RudebuschJuan CasadoJonathan L. MarshallGuzmán L. EspejoMasayoshi NakanoJosé L. ZafraMichael M. HaleyCarlos J. Gómez-garcíaKjell Jorner

subject

Models MolecularChemical substanceFree RadicalsGeneral Chemical EngineeringChemistry OrganicElectronsCrystallography X-Ray010402 general chemistryPhotochemistry01 natural sciencesMagneticschemistry.chemical_compoundTriplet stateAnthracenesFusionAnthraceneMolecular StructureSpintronics010405 organic chemistryTemperatureGeneral Chemistry0104 chemical scienceschemistryPolycyclic HydrocarbonsScience technology and societyDerivative (chemistry)

description

The consequence of unpaired electrons in organic molecules has fascinated and confounded chemists for over a century. The study of open-shell molecules has been rekindled in recent years as new synthetic methods, improved spectroscopic techniques and powerful computational tools have been brought to bear on this field. Nonetheless, it is the intrinsic instability of the biradical species that limits the practicality of this research. Here we report the synthesis and characterization of a molecule based on the diindeno[b,i]anthracene framework that exhibits pronounced open-shell character yet possesses remarkable stability. The synthetic route is rapid, efficient and possible on the gram scale. The molecular structure was confirmed through single-crystal X-ray diffraction. From variable-temperature Raman spectroscopy and magnetic susceptibility measurements a thermally accessible triplet excited state was found. Organic field-effect transistor device data show an ambipolar performance with balanced electron and hole mobilities. Our results demonstrate the rational design and synthesis of an air- and temperature-stable biradical compound.

https://doi.org/10.1038/nchem.2518