Cargando…
In-depth investigation of large axial magnetic anisotropy in monometallic 3d complexes using frequency domain magnetic resonance and ab initio methods: a study of trigonal bipyramidal Co(ii)
The magnetic properties of 3d monometallic complexes can be tuned through geometric control, owing to their synthetic accessibility and relative structural simplicity. Monodentate ligands offer great potential for fine-tuning the coordination environment to engineer both the axial and rhombic zero-f...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Royal Society of Chemistry
2019
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6601423/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31341591 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9sc00987f |
_version_ | 1783431293361455104 |
---|---|
author | Hay, Moya A. Sarkar, Arup Craig, Gavin A. Bhaskaran, Lakshmi Nehrkorn, Joscha Ozerov, Mykhailo Marriott, Katie E. R. Wilson, Claire Rajaraman, Gopalan Hill, Stephen Murrie, Mark |
author_facet | Hay, Moya A. Sarkar, Arup Craig, Gavin A. Bhaskaran, Lakshmi Nehrkorn, Joscha Ozerov, Mykhailo Marriott, Katie E. R. Wilson, Claire Rajaraman, Gopalan Hill, Stephen Murrie, Mark |
author_sort | Hay, Moya A. |
collection | PubMed |
description | The magnetic properties of 3d monometallic complexes can be tuned through geometric control, owing to their synthetic accessibility and relative structural simplicity. Monodentate ligands offer great potential for fine-tuning the coordination environment to engineer both the axial and rhombic zero-field splitting (ZFS) parameters. In [CoCl(3)(DABCO)(HDABCO)] (1), the trigonal bipyramidal Co(ii) centre has two bulky axial ligands and three equatorial chloride ligands. An in-depth experimental and theoretical study of 1 reveals a large easy-plane magnetic anisotropy (+ve D) with a negligible rhombic zero-field splitting (E) due to the strict axial symmetry imposed by the C(3) symmetric ligand and trigonal space group. The large easy-plane magnetic anisotropy (D = +44.5 cm(–1)) is directly deduced using high-field EPR and frequency-domain magnetic resonance (FDMR) studies. Ab initio calculations reveal a large positive contribution to the D term arising from ground state/excited state mixing of the (4)E′′ states at ∼4085 cm(–1) and a minor contribution from the spin–flip transition as well. The nature of the slow relaxation in 1 is elucidated through analysis of the rates of relaxation of magnetisation, taking into account Raman and direct spin–lattice relaxation processes and Quantum Tunnelling of the Magnetisation (QTM). The terms relating to the direct process and QTM were found based on the fit of the field-dependence of τ at 2 K. Subsequently, these were used as fixed parameters in the fit of the temperature-dependence of τ to obtain the Raman terms. This experimental–theoretical investigation provides further insight into the power of FDMR and ab initio methods for the thorough investigation of magnetic anisotropy. Thus, these results contribute to design criteria for high magnetic anisotropy systems. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-6601423 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2019 |
publisher | Royal Society of Chemistry |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-66014232019-07-24 In-depth investigation of large axial magnetic anisotropy in monometallic 3d complexes using frequency domain magnetic resonance and ab initio methods: a study of trigonal bipyramidal Co(ii) Hay, Moya A. Sarkar, Arup Craig, Gavin A. Bhaskaran, Lakshmi Nehrkorn, Joscha Ozerov, Mykhailo Marriott, Katie E. R. Wilson, Claire Rajaraman, Gopalan Hill, Stephen Murrie, Mark Chem Sci Chemistry The magnetic properties of 3d monometallic complexes can be tuned through geometric control, owing to their synthetic accessibility and relative structural simplicity. Monodentate ligands offer great potential for fine-tuning the coordination environment to engineer both the axial and rhombic zero-field splitting (ZFS) parameters. In [CoCl(3)(DABCO)(HDABCO)] (1), the trigonal bipyramidal Co(ii) centre has two bulky axial ligands and three equatorial chloride ligands. An in-depth experimental and theoretical study of 1 reveals a large easy-plane magnetic anisotropy (+ve D) with a negligible rhombic zero-field splitting (E) due to the strict axial symmetry imposed by the C(3) symmetric ligand and trigonal space group. The large easy-plane magnetic anisotropy (D = +44.5 cm(–1)) is directly deduced using high-field EPR and frequency-domain magnetic resonance (FDMR) studies. Ab initio calculations reveal a large positive contribution to the D term arising from ground state/excited state mixing of the (4)E′′ states at ∼4085 cm(–1) and a minor contribution from the spin–flip transition as well. The nature of the slow relaxation in 1 is elucidated through analysis of the rates of relaxation of magnetisation, taking into account Raman and direct spin–lattice relaxation processes and Quantum Tunnelling of the Magnetisation (QTM). The terms relating to the direct process and QTM were found based on the fit of the field-dependence of τ at 2 K. Subsequently, these were used as fixed parameters in the fit of the temperature-dependence of τ to obtain the Raman terms. This experimental–theoretical investigation provides further insight into the power of FDMR and ab initio methods for the thorough investigation of magnetic anisotropy. Thus, these results contribute to design criteria for high magnetic anisotropy systems. Royal Society of Chemistry 2019-05-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6601423/ /pubmed/31341591 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9sc00987f Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is freely available. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence (CC BY 3.0) |
spellingShingle | Chemistry Hay, Moya A. Sarkar, Arup Craig, Gavin A. Bhaskaran, Lakshmi Nehrkorn, Joscha Ozerov, Mykhailo Marriott, Katie E. R. Wilson, Claire Rajaraman, Gopalan Hill, Stephen Murrie, Mark In-depth investigation of large axial magnetic anisotropy in monometallic 3d complexes using frequency domain magnetic resonance and ab initio methods: a study of trigonal bipyramidal Co(ii) |
title | In-depth investigation of large axial magnetic anisotropy in monometallic 3d complexes using frequency domain magnetic resonance and ab initio methods: a study of trigonal bipyramidal Co(ii)
|
title_full | In-depth investigation of large axial magnetic anisotropy in monometallic 3d complexes using frequency domain magnetic resonance and ab initio methods: a study of trigonal bipyramidal Co(ii)
|
title_fullStr | In-depth investigation of large axial magnetic anisotropy in monometallic 3d complexes using frequency domain magnetic resonance and ab initio methods: a study of trigonal bipyramidal Co(ii)
|
title_full_unstemmed | In-depth investigation of large axial magnetic anisotropy in monometallic 3d complexes using frequency domain magnetic resonance and ab initio methods: a study of trigonal bipyramidal Co(ii)
|
title_short | In-depth investigation of large axial magnetic anisotropy in monometallic 3d complexes using frequency domain magnetic resonance and ab initio methods: a study of trigonal bipyramidal Co(ii)
|
title_sort | in-depth investigation of large axial magnetic anisotropy in monometallic 3d complexes using frequency domain magnetic resonance and ab initio methods: a study of trigonal bipyramidal co(ii) |
topic | Chemistry |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6601423/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31341591 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9sc00987f |
work_keys_str_mv | AT haymoyaa indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii AT sarkararup indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii AT craiggavina indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii AT bhaskaranlakshmi indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii AT nehrkornjoscha indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii AT ozerovmykhailo indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii AT marriottkatieer indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii AT wilsonclaire indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii AT rajaramangopalan indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii AT hillstephen indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii AT murriemark indepthinvestigationoflargeaxialmagneticanisotropyinmonometallic3dcomplexesusingfrequencydomainmagneticresonanceandabinitiomethodsastudyoftrigonalbipyramidalcoii |