6533b850fe1ef96bd12a848c
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Switching of Slow Magnetic Relaxation Dynamics in Mononuclear Dysprosium(III) Compounds with Charge Density
José J. BaldovíEugenio CoronadoByoung Jin SuhJeong Hwa SongChang Seop HongSungwon YoonWoo Ram LeeKwang Soo LimAlejandro Gaita-ariñosubject
010405 organic chemistryChemistryUNESCO::QUÍMICARelaxation (NMR)Charge densitychemistry.chemical_element010402 general chemistry:QUÍMICA [UNESCO]01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesIonInorganic ChemistryCrystallographyMagnetic anisotropyMagnetizationNuclear magnetic resonanceDysprosiumMoleculePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryGround statedescription
The symmetry around a Dy ion is recognized to be a crucial parameter dictating magnetization relaxation dynamics. We prepared two similar square-antiprismatic complexes, [Dy(LOMe)2(H2O)2](PF6) (1) and Dy(LOMe)2(NO3) (2), where LOMe = [CpCo{P(O)(O(CH3))2}3], including either two neutral water molecules (1) or an anionic nitrate ligand (2). We demonstrated that in this case relaxation dynamics is dramatically affected by the introduction of a charged ligand, stabilizing the easy axis of magnetization along the nitrate direction. We also showed that the application of either a direct-current field or chemical dilution effectively stops quantum tunneling in the ground state of 2, thereby increasing the relaxation time by over 3 orders of magnitude at 3.5 K. FP7-ERC-247384 ERC-2014-CoG/ 647301 MAT2014-56143-R CTQ2014-52758-P MDM-2015-0538 The symmetry around a Dy ion is recognized to be a crucial parameter dictating magnetization relaxation dynamics. We prepared two similar square-antiprismatic complexes, [Dy(LOMe)2(H2O)2](PF6) (1) and Dy(LOMe)2(NO3) (2), where LOMe = [CpCo{P(O)(O(CH3))2}3], including either two neutral water molecules (1) or an anionic nitrate ligand (2). We demonstrated that in this case relaxation dynamics is dramatically affected by the introduction of a charged ligand, stabilizing the easy axis of magnetization along the nitrate direction. We also showed that the application of either a direct-current field or chemical dilution effectively stops quantum tunneling in the ground state of 2, thereby increasing the relaxation time by over 3 orders of magnitude at 3.5 K.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-01-01 |