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RESEARCH PRODUCT
A Luminescent Thermometer Exhibiting Slow Relaxation of the Magnetization: Toward Self-Monitored Building Blocks for Next-Generation Optomagnetic Devices
Dylan ErrulatEva HemmerKatie L. M. HarrimanO. D. D. CoutoFernando Aparecido SigoliAmélie PialatJani O. MoilanenFernando IikawaDiogo A. GálicoBulat GabidullinMuralee MurugesuRiccardo Marinsubject
Materials sciencePhotoluminescenceZeeman effect010405 organic chemistrybusiness.industryGeneral Chemical EngineeringRelaxation (NMR)General ChemistryAtmospheric temperature range010402 general chemistry01 natural sciences7. Clean energy0104 chemical sciencesMagnetizationsymbols.namesakeChemistryThermometerMagnetHeat generationsymbolsOptoelectronicssingle-molecule magnetsbusinessQD1-999Research Articledescription
The development and integration of Single-Molecule Magnets (SMMs) into molecular electronic devices continue to be an exciting challenge. In such potential devices, heat generation due to the electric current is a critical issue that has to be considered upon device fabrication. To read out accurately the temperature at the submicrometer spatial range, new multifunctional SMMs need to be developed. Herein, we present the first self-calibrated molecular thermometer with SMM properties, which provides an elegant avenue to address these issues. The employment of 2,2′-bipyrimidine and 1,1,1-trifluoroacetylacetonate ligands results in a dinuclear compound, [Dy2(bpm)(tfaa)6], which exhibits slow relaxation of the magnetization along with remarkable photoluminescent properties. This combination allows the gaining of fundamental insight in the electronic properties of the compound and investigation of optomagnetic cross-effects (Zeeman effect). Importantly, spectral variations stemming from two distinct thermal-dependent mechanisms taking place at the molecular level are used to perform luminescence thermometry over the 5–398 K temperature range. Overall, these properties make the proposed system a unique molecular luminescent thermometer bearing SMM properties, which preserves its temperature self-monitoring capability even under applied magnetic fields.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-01-01 | ACS Central Science |