6533b839fe1ef96bd12a6105

RESEARCH PRODUCT

NMR and $\mu^{+}$SR detection of unconventional spin dynamics in Er(trensal) and Dy(trensal) molecular magnets

Lucaccini E.Sorace L.Adelnia F.Sanna S.Arosio P.Mariani M.Carretta S.Salman Z.Borsa F.Lascialfari A.

subject

nanomagnetism molecular magnets muon spectroscopy nuclear magnetic resonanceCondensed Matter - Materials ScienceCondensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics

description

Measurements of proton nuclear magnetic resonance (H1NMR) spectra and relaxation and of muon spin relaxation (μ+SR) have been performed as a function of temperature and external magnetic field on two isostructural lanthanide complexes, Er(trensal) and Dy(trensal) [where H3trensal=2,2′,2′′-tris-(salicylideneimino)triethylamine], featuring crystallographically imposed trigonal symmetry. Both the nuclear 1/T1 and muon λ longitudinal relaxation rates (LRRs) exhibit a peak for temperatures T < 30 K, associated to the slowing down of the spin dynamics, and the width of the NMR absorption spectra starts to increase significantly at T ∼50 K, a temperature sizably higher than the one of the LRR peaks. The LRR peaks have a field and temperature dependence different from those previously reported for all molecular nanomagnets. They do not follow the Bloembergen-Purcell-Pound scaling of the amplitude and position in temperature and field and thus cannot be explained in terms of a single dominating correlation time τc determined by the spin slowing down at low temperature. Further, for T<50K the spectral width does not follow the temperature behavior of the magnetic susceptibility χ. We suggest, using simple qualitative considerations, that the observed behavior is due to a combination of two different relaxation processes characterized by the correlation times τLT and τHT, dominating for T < 30 K and T>50K, respectively. Finally, the observed flattening of LRR for T < 5 K is suggested to have a quantum origin.

10.1103/physrevb.100.174416http://arxiv.org/abs/1905.08216