Cargando…

Covalency and magnetic anisotropy in lanthanide single molecule magnets: the DyDOTA archetype

Lanthanide ions when complexed by polyamino-polycarboxylate chelators form a class of compounds of paramount importance in several research and technological areas, particularly in the fields of magnetic resonance and molecular magnetism. Indeed, the gadolinium derivative is one of the most employed...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Briganti, Matteo, Garcia, Guglielmo Fernandez, Jung, Julie, Sessoli, Roberta, Le Guennic, Boris, Totti, Federico
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Royal Society of Chemistry 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6685353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31588292
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9sc01743g
_version_ 1783442388546486272
author Briganti, Matteo
Garcia, Guglielmo Fernandez
Jung, Julie
Sessoli, Roberta
Le Guennic, Boris
Totti, Federico
author_facet Briganti, Matteo
Garcia, Guglielmo Fernandez
Jung, Julie
Sessoli, Roberta
Le Guennic, Boris
Totti, Federico
author_sort Briganti, Matteo
collection PubMed
description Lanthanide ions when complexed by polyamino-polycarboxylate chelators form a class of compounds of paramount importance in several research and technological areas, particularly in the fields of magnetic resonance and molecular magnetism. Indeed, the gadolinium derivative is one of the most employed contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging while the dysprosium one belongs to a new generation of contrast agents for T(2)-weighted MRI. In molecular magnetism, Single Molecule Magnets (SMMs) containing lanthanide ions have become readily popular in the chemistry and physics communities since record energy barriers to the reversal of magnetization were reported. The success of lanthanide complexes lies in their large anisotropy due to the contribution of the unquenched orbital angular momentum. However, only a few efforts have been made so far to understand how the f-orbitals can be influenced by the surrounding ligands. The outcomes have been rationalized using mere electrostatic perturbation models. In the archetype compound [Na{Dy(DOTA) (H(2)O)}]·4H(2)O (Na{DyDOTA}·4H(2)O) an unexpected easy axis of magnetization perpendicular to the pseudo-tetragonal axis of the molecule was found. Interestingly, a dependency of the orientation of the principal magnetization axis on the simple rotation of the coordinating apical water molecule (AWM) – highly relevant for MRI contrast – around the Dy-O(AWM) bond was predicted by ab initio calculations, too. However, such a behaviour has been contested in a subsequent paper justifying their conclusions on pure electrostatic assumptions. In this paper, we want to shed some light on the nature of the subtle effects induced by the water molecule on the magnetic properties of the DyDOTA archetype complex. Therefore, we have critically reviewed the structural models already published in the literature along with new ones, showing how the easy axis orientation can dangerously depend on the chosen model. The different computed behaviors of the orientation of the easy axis of magnetization have been rationalized as a function of the energy gap between the ground and the first excited doublet. Magneto-structural correlations together with a mapping of the electrostatic potential generated by the ligands around the Dy(iii) ion through a multipolar expansion have also been used to evidence and quantify the covalent contribution of the AWM orbitals.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6685353
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Royal Society of Chemistry
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-66853532019-10-04 Covalency and magnetic anisotropy in lanthanide single molecule magnets: the DyDOTA archetype Briganti, Matteo Garcia, Guglielmo Fernandez Jung, Julie Sessoli, Roberta Le Guennic, Boris Totti, Federico Chem Sci Chemistry Lanthanide ions when complexed by polyamino-polycarboxylate chelators form a class of compounds of paramount importance in several research and technological areas, particularly in the fields of magnetic resonance and molecular magnetism. Indeed, the gadolinium derivative is one of the most employed contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging while the dysprosium one belongs to a new generation of contrast agents for T(2)-weighted MRI. In molecular magnetism, Single Molecule Magnets (SMMs) containing lanthanide ions have become readily popular in the chemistry and physics communities since record energy barriers to the reversal of magnetization were reported. The success of lanthanide complexes lies in their large anisotropy due to the contribution of the unquenched orbital angular momentum. However, only a few efforts have been made so far to understand how the f-orbitals can be influenced by the surrounding ligands. The outcomes have been rationalized using mere electrostatic perturbation models. In the archetype compound [Na{Dy(DOTA) (H(2)O)}]·4H(2)O (Na{DyDOTA}·4H(2)O) an unexpected easy axis of magnetization perpendicular to the pseudo-tetragonal axis of the molecule was found. Interestingly, a dependency of the orientation of the principal magnetization axis on the simple rotation of the coordinating apical water molecule (AWM) – highly relevant for MRI contrast – around the Dy-O(AWM) bond was predicted by ab initio calculations, too. However, such a behaviour has been contested in a subsequent paper justifying their conclusions on pure electrostatic assumptions. In this paper, we want to shed some light on the nature of the subtle effects induced by the water molecule on the magnetic properties of the DyDOTA archetype complex. Therefore, we have critically reviewed the structural models already published in the literature along with new ones, showing how the easy axis orientation can dangerously depend on the chosen model. The different computed behaviors of the orientation of the easy axis of magnetization have been rationalized as a function of the energy gap between the ground and the first excited doublet. Magneto-structural correlations together with a mapping of the electrostatic potential generated by the ligands around the Dy(iii) ion through a multipolar expansion have also been used to evidence and quantify the covalent contribution of the AWM orbitals. Royal Society of Chemistry 2019-06-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6685353/ /pubmed/31588292 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9sc01743g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This article is freely available. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 Unported Licence (CC BY-NC 3.0)
spellingShingle Chemistry
Briganti, Matteo
Garcia, Guglielmo Fernandez
Jung, Julie
Sessoli, Roberta
Le Guennic, Boris
Totti, Federico
Covalency and magnetic anisotropy in lanthanide single molecule magnets: the DyDOTA archetype
title Covalency and magnetic anisotropy in lanthanide single molecule magnets: the DyDOTA archetype
title_full Covalency and magnetic anisotropy in lanthanide single molecule magnets: the DyDOTA archetype
title_fullStr Covalency and magnetic anisotropy in lanthanide single molecule magnets: the DyDOTA archetype
title_full_unstemmed Covalency and magnetic anisotropy in lanthanide single molecule magnets: the DyDOTA archetype
title_short Covalency and magnetic anisotropy in lanthanide single molecule magnets: the DyDOTA archetype
title_sort covalency and magnetic anisotropy in lanthanide single molecule magnets: the dydota archetype
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6685353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31588292
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9sc01743g
work_keys_str_mv AT brigantimatteo covalencyandmagneticanisotropyinlanthanidesinglemoleculemagnetsthedydotaarchetype
AT garciaguglielmofernandez covalencyandmagneticanisotropyinlanthanidesinglemoleculemagnetsthedydotaarchetype
AT jungjulie covalencyandmagneticanisotropyinlanthanidesinglemoleculemagnetsthedydotaarchetype
AT sessoliroberta covalencyandmagneticanisotropyinlanthanidesinglemoleculemagnetsthedydotaarchetype
AT leguennicboris covalencyandmagneticanisotropyinlanthanidesinglemoleculemagnetsthedydotaarchetype
AT tottifederico covalencyandmagneticanisotropyinlanthanidesinglemoleculemagnetsthedydotaarchetype