6533b82afe1ef96bd128c2d8
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Charge-transfer driven by ultrafast spin-transition in a CoFe Prussian blue analogue
Matilde Cardoso TrabucoLaure CatalaSerhane ZerdaneLodovico BalducciCécile ExertierSanghoon SongSamir F. MatarSamir F. MatarMatteo LevantinoMarco CammarataSandra MazeratJames M. GlowniaRoberto Alonso-moriTalal MallahEric ColletGiovanni Azzolinasubject
[PHYS]Physics [physics]Prussian blue010405 organic chemistryGeneral Chemical EngineeringSpin transitionIntermetallicGeneral Chemistry[CHIM.MATE]Chemical Sciences/Material chemistry010402 general chemistryPhotomagnetism01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesultrafast dynamicschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryChemical physicsFemtosecond[PHYS.COND.CM-MS]Physics [physics]/Condensed Matter [cond-mat]/Materials Science [cond-mat.mtrl-sci][CHIM]Chemical Sciences[CHIM.COOR]Chemical Sciences/Coordination chemistry[PHYS.COND]Physics [physics]/Condensed Matter [cond-mat]Absorption (electromagnetic radiation)Ultrashort pulseBimetallic stripComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSdescription
Photoinduced charge-transfer is an important process in nature and technology and is responsible for the emergence of exotic functionalities, such as magnetic order for cyanide-bridged bimetallic coordination networks. Despite its broad interest and intensive developments in chemistry and material sciences, the atomic-scale description of the initial photoinduced process, which couples intermetallic charge-transfer and spin transition, has been debated for decades; it has been beyond reach due to its extreme speed. Here we study this process in a prototype cyanide-bridged CoFe system by femtosecond X-ray and optical absorption spectroscopies, enabling the disentanglement of ultrafast electronic and structural dynamics. Our results demonstrate that it is the spin transition that occurs first on the Co site within ~50 fs, and it is this that drives the subsequent Fe-to-Co charge-transfer within ~200 fs. This study represents a step towards understanding and controlling charge-transfer-based functions using light. Cyanide-bridged CoFe coordination networks exhibit photomagnetism because of coupled charge-transfer and spin transition. Now, femtosecond X-ray and optical absorption spectroscopies have enabled the electronic and structural dynamics of this light-induced process to be disentangled and show that it is the spin transition on the cobalt atom, occurring within ~50 fs, that induces the Fe-to-Co charge-transfer within ~200 fs.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-12-07 |