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Single-ion magnetism in the extended solid-state: insights from X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy

Large single-ion magnetic anisotropy is observed in lithium nitride doped with iron. The iron sites are two-coordinate, putting iron doped lithium nitride amongst a growing number of two coordinate transition metal single-ion magnets (SIMs). Uniquely, the relaxation times to magnetisation reversal a...

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Autores principales: Huzan, Myron S., Fix, Manuel, Aramini, Matteo, Bencok, Peter, Mosselmans, J. Frederick W., Hayama, Shusaku, Breitner, Franziska A., Gee, Leland B., Titus, Charles J., Arrio, Marie-Anne, Jesche, Anton, Baker, Michael L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8162461/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34123206
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sc03787g
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author Huzan, Myron S.
Fix, Manuel
Aramini, Matteo
Bencok, Peter
Mosselmans, J. Frederick W.
Hayama, Shusaku
Breitner, Franziska A.
Gee, Leland B.
Titus, Charles J.
Arrio, Marie-Anne
Jesche, Anton
Baker, Michael L.
author_facet Huzan, Myron S.
Fix, Manuel
Aramini, Matteo
Bencok, Peter
Mosselmans, J. Frederick W.
Hayama, Shusaku
Breitner, Franziska A.
Gee, Leland B.
Titus, Charles J.
Arrio, Marie-Anne
Jesche, Anton
Baker, Michael L.
author_sort Huzan, Myron S.
collection PubMed
description Large single-ion magnetic anisotropy is observed in lithium nitride doped with iron. The iron sites are two-coordinate, putting iron doped lithium nitride amongst a growing number of two coordinate transition metal single-ion magnets (SIMs). Uniquely, the relaxation times to magnetisation reversal are over two orders of magnitude longer in iron doped lithium nitride than other 3d-metal SIMs, and comparable with high-performance lanthanide-based SIMs. To understand the origin of these enhanced magnetic properties a detailed characterisation of electronic structure is presented. Access to dopant electronic structure calls for atomic specific techniques, hence a combination of detailed single-crystal X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopies are applied. Together K-edge, L(2,3)-edge and Kβ X-ray spectroscopies probe local geometry and electronic structure, identifying iron doped lithium nitride to be a prototype, solid-state SIM, clean of stoichiometric vacancies where Fe lattice sites are geometrically equivalent. Extended X-ray absorption fine structure and angular dependent single-crystal X-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy measurements determine Fe(I) dopant ions to be linearly coordinated, occupying a D(6h) symmetry pocket. The dopant engages in strong 3dπ-bonding, resulting in an exceptionally short Fe–N bond length (1.873(7) Å) and rigorous linearity. It is proposed that this structure protects dopant sites from Renner–Teller vibronic coupling and pseudo Jahn–Teller distortions, enhancing magnetic properties with respect to molecular-based linear complexes. The Fe ligand field is quantified by L(2,3)-edge XAS from which the energy reduction of 3d(z(2)) due to strong 4s mixing is deduced. Quantification of magnetic anisotropy barriers in low concentration dopant sites is inhibited by many established methods, including far-infrared and neutron scattering. We deduce variable temperature L(3)-edge XAS can be applied to quantify the J = 7/2 magnetic anisotropy barrier, 34.80 meV (∼280 cm(−1)), that corresponds with Orbach relaxation via the first excited, M(J) = ±5/2 doublet. The results demonstrate that dopant sites within solid-state host lattices could offer a viable alternative to rare-earth bulk magnets and high-performance SIMs, where the host matrix can be tailored to impose high symmetry and control lattice induced relaxation effects.
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spelling pubmed-81624612021-06-11 Single-ion magnetism in the extended solid-state: insights from X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy Huzan, Myron S. Fix, Manuel Aramini, Matteo Bencok, Peter Mosselmans, J. Frederick W. Hayama, Shusaku Breitner, Franziska A. Gee, Leland B. Titus, Charles J. Arrio, Marie-Anne Jesche, Anton Baker, Michael L. Chem Sci Chemistry Large single-ion magnetic anisotropy is observed in lithium nitride doped with iron. The iron sites are two-coordinate, putting iron doped lithium nitride amongst a growing number of two coordinate transition metal single-ion magnets (SIMs). Uniquely, the relaxation times to magnetisation reversal are over two orders of magnitude longer in iron doped lithium nitride than other 3d-metal SIMs, and comparable with high-performance lanthanide-based SIMs. To understand the origin of these enhanced magnetic properties a detailed characterisation of electronic structure is presented. Access to dopant electronic structure calls for atomic specific techniques, hence a combination of detailed single-crystal X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopies are applied. Together K-edge, L(2,3)-edge and Kβ X-ray spectroscopies probe local geometry and electronic structure, identifying iron doped lithium nitride to be a prototype, solid-state SIM, clean of stoichiometric vacancies where Fe lattice sites are geometrically equivalent. Extended X-ray absorption fine structure and angular dependent single-crystal X-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy measurements determine Fe(I) dopant ions to be linearly coordinated, occupying a D(6h) symmetry pocket. The dopant engages in strong 3dπ-bonding, resulting in an exceptionally short Fe–N bond length (1.873(7) Å) and rigorous linearity. It is proposed that this structure protects dopant sites from Renner–Teller vibronic coupling and pseudo Jahn–Teller distortions, enhancing magnetic properties with respect to molecular-based linear complexes. The Fe ligand field is quantified by L(2,3)-edge XAS from which the energy reduction of 3d(z(2)) due to strong 4s mixing is deduced. Quantification of magnetic anisotropy barriers in low concentration dopant sites is inhibited by many established methods, including far-infrared and neutron scattering. We deduce variable temperature L(3)-edge XAS can be applied to quantify the J = 7/2 magnetic anisotropy barrier, 34.80 meV (∼280 cm(−1)), that corresponds with Orbach relaxation via the first excited, M(J) = ±5/2 doublet. The results demonstrate that dopant sites within solid-state host lattices could offer a viable alternative to rare-earth bulk magnets and high-performance SIMs, where the host matrix can be tailored to impose high symmetry and control lattice induced relaxation effects. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020-10-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8162461/ /pubmed/34123206 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sc03787g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Huzan, Myron S.
Fix, Manuel
Aramini, Matteo
Bencok, Peter
Mosselmans, J. Frederick W.
Hayama, Shusaku
Breitner, Franziska A.
Gee, Leland B.
Titus, Charles J.
Arrio, Marie-Anne
Jesche, Anton
Baker, Michael L.
Single-ion magnetism in the extended solid-state: insights from X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy
title Single-ion magnetism in the extended solid-state: insights from X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy
title_full Single-ion magnetism in the extended solid-state: insights from X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy
title_fullStr Single-ion magnetism in the extended solid-state: insights from X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy
title_full_unstemmed Single-ion magnetism in the extended solid-state: insights from X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy
title_short Single-ion magnetism in the extended solid-state: insights from X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy
title_sort single-ion magnetism in the extended solid-state: insights from x-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8162461/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34123206
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sc03787g
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