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Nature Communications

Publication date: 2015-01-01
Publisher: Nature Portfolio

Author:

Pugh, Thomas
Tuna, Floriana ; Ungur, Liviu ; Collison, David ; McInnes, Eric JL ; Chibotaru, Liviu ; Layfield, Richard A

Keywords:

Magnetic properties and materials, Organometallic chemistry, Science & Technology, Multidisciplinary Sciences, Science & Technology - Other Topics, PHOSPHINIDENE COMPLEX, RELAXATION, ANISOTROPY, SYMMETRY, REACTIVITY, BLOCKING, SALTS

Abstract:

Single-molecule magnets are a type of coordination compound that can retain magnetic information at low temperatures. Single-molecule magnets based on lanthanides have accounted for many important advances, including systems with very large energy barriers to reversal of the magnetization, and a di-terbium complex that displays magnetic hysteresis up to 14 K and shows strong coercivity. Ligand design is crucial for the development of new single-molecule magnets: organometallic chemistry presents possibilities for using unconventional ligands, particularly those with soft donor groups. Here we report dysprosium single-molecule magnets with neutral and anionic phosphorus donor ligands, and show that their properties change dramatically when varying the ligand from phosphine to phosphide to phosphinidene. A phosphide-ligated, trimetallic dysprosium single-molecule magnet relaxes via the second-excited Kramers' doublet, and, when doped into a diamagnetic matrix at the single-ion level, produces a large energy barrier of 256 cm−1 and magnetic hysteresis up to 4.4 K.