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1.
Nanoscale ; 2024 Jul 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38993100

ABSTRACT

The decoration of technologically relevant surfaces, such as metal oxides, with Single-Molecule Magnets (SMMs) constitutes a persistent challenge for the integration of these molecular systems into novel technologies and, in particular, for the development of spintronic and quantum devices. We used UHV thermal sublimation to deposit tetrairon(III) propeller-shaped SMMs (Fe4) as a single layer on a TiO2 ultrathin film grown on Cu(001). The properties of the molecular deposit were studied using a multi-technique approach based on standard topographic and spectroscopic measurements, which demonstrated that molecules remain largely intact upon deposition. Ultralow temperature X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy (XAS) with linearly and circularly polarized light was further employed to evaluate both the molecular organization and the magnetic properties of the Fe4 monolayer. X-ray Natural Linear Dichroism (XNLD) and X-ray Magnetic Circular Dichroism (XMCD) showed that molecules in a monolayer display a preferential orientation and an open magnetic hysteresis with pronounced quantum tunnelling steps up to 900 mK. However, unexpected extra features in the XAS and XMCD spectra disclosed a minority fraction of altered molecules, suggesting that the TiO2 film may be chemically non-innocent. The observed persistence of SMM behaviour on a metal oxide thin film opens new possibilities for the development of SMM-based hybrid systems.

2.
Nanoscale ; 16(22): 10607-10617, 2024 Jun 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38758111

ABSTRACT

Maghemite nanoparticles functionalised with Co(II) coordination complexes at their surface show a significant increase of their magnetic anisotropy, leading to a doubling of the blocking temperature and a sixfold increase of the coercive field. Magnetometric studies suggest an enhancement that is not related to surface disordering, and point to a molecular effect involving magnetic exchange interactions mediated by the oxygen atoms at the interface as its source. Field- and temperature-dependent X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) studies show that the magnetic anisotropy enhancement is not limited to surface atoms and involves the core of the nanoparticle. These studies also point to a mechanism driven by anisotropic exchange and confirm the strength of the magnetic exchange interactions. The coupling between the complex and the nanoparticle persists at room temperature. Simulations based on the XMCD data give an effective exchange field value through the oxido coordination bridge between the Co(II) complex and the nanoparticle that is comparable to the exchange field between iron ions in bulk maghemite. Further evidence of the effectiveness of the oxido coordination bridge in mediating the magnetic interaction at the interface is given with the Ni(II) analog to the Co(II) surface-functionalised nanoparticles. A substrate-induced magnetic response is observed for the Ni(II) complexes, up to room temperature.

3.
Inorg Chem ; 62(46): 18864-18877, 2023 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37942765

ABSTRACT

The potassium hexacyanoferrate(III), K3[FeIII(CN)6], is known for its exceptional magnetic anisotropy among the 3d transition metal series. The Fe(III) ions are in the S = 1/2 low spin state imposed by the strong crystal field of the cyanido ligands. A large orbital magnetic moment is expected from previous publications. In the present work, X-ray magnetic circular dichroism was recorded for a powder sample, allowing direct measurement of the Fe(III) orbital magnetic moment. A combination of molecular multiconfigurational ab initio and atomic ligand field multiplets calculations provides the spin and orbital magnetic moments for the [FeIII(CN)6]3- isolated cluster, the crystallographic unit cell, and the powder sample. The calculations of the angular dependencies of the spin and orbital magnetic moments with the external magnetic induction direction reveal easy magnetization axes for each S = 1/2 molecular entity and the crystal. It also shows that the orbital magnetic moment dominates the spin magnetic moment for all directions. Our measurements confirm that the orbital magnetic moment contributes to 60% of the total magnetization for the powder, which is in excellent agreement with our theoretical predictions. An orbital magnetic moment greater than the spin magnetic moment is exceptional for 3d transition metal ions. The impact of crystal field strength and distortion, π back-bonding, spin-orbit coupling, and external magnetic induction was analyzed, leading to a deeper understanding of the spin and orbital magnetic anisotropies.

4.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 58(86): 12098-12101, 2022 Oct 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36222458

ABSTRACT

The switching properties of a cyanido-bridged Fe/Co square molecule were investigated by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and X-ray absorption spectroscopy at both Fe and Co K-edges. Combining these two techniques, a complete picture of the thermal-, light- and X-ray-induced metal-to-metal electron transfer is obtained, illustrating the concerted role played by the Fe and Co sites.

5.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 3838, 2022 Jul 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35788608

ABSTRACT

Superconductors and magnetic materials, including molecules, are key ingredients for quantum computing and spintronics. However, only a little is known about how these materials interact in multilayer nanostructures like the hybrid architectures nowadays under development for such advanced applications. Here, we show that a single layer of magnetic molecules, Terbium(III) bis-phthalocyaninato (TbPc2) complexes, deposited under controlled UHV conditions on a superconducting Pb(111) surface is sensitive to the topology of the intermediate state of the superconductor, namely to the presence and evolution of superconducting and normal domains due to screening and penetration of an external magnetic field. The topological hysteresis of the superconducting substrate imprints a local evolution of the magnetisation of the TbPc2 molecules in the monolayer. Element and surface selective detection is achieved by recording the X-ray magnetic circular dichroism of the Tb atoms. This study reveals the impressive potential of magnetic molecules for sensing local magnetic field variations in molecular/superconductor hybrid devices, including spin resonators or spin injecting and spin filtering components for spintronics applications.

6.
Inorg Chem ; 60(21): 16388-16396, 2021 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34624189

ABSTRACT

Prussian blue analogue nanocrystals of the CsINiII[CrIII(CN)6] cubic network with 6 nm size were assembled as a single monolayer on highly organized pyrolytic graphite (HOPG). X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) studies, at the Ni and Cr L2,3 edges, reveal the presence of an easy plane of magnetization evidenced by an opening of the magnetic hysteresis loop (coercive field of ≈200 Oe) when the magnetic field, B, is at 60° relative to the normal to the substrate. The angular dependence of the X-ray natural linear dichroism (XNLD) reveals both an orientation of the nanocrystals on the substrate and an anisotropy of the electronic cloud of the NiII and CrIII coordination sphere species belonging to the nanocrystals' surface. Ligand field multiplet (LFM) calculations that reproduce the experimental data are consistent with an elongated tetragonal distortion of surface NiII coordination sphere responsible for the magnetic behavior of monolayer.

7.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 12(26): 6152-6158, 2021 Jul 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34184899

ABSTRACT

Spin-crossover molecules are very attractive compounds to realize multifunctional spintronic devices. Understanding their properties when deposited on metals is therefore crucial for their future rational implementation as ultrathin films in such devices. Using X-ray absorption spectroscopy, we study the thermal transition of the spin-crossover compound FeII((3,5-(CH3)2Pz)3BH)2 from submonolayer to multilayers on a Cu(111) substrate. We determine how the residual fraction of high spin molecules at low temperature, as well as the bistability range and the temperature of switching, depends on the layer thickness. The most spectacular effect is the clear opening of a 35 ± 9 K thermal hysteresis loop for a 3.0 ± 0.7 monolayers thick film. To better understand the role played by the substrate and the dimensionality on the thermal bistability, we have performed Monte Carlo Arrhenius simulations in the framework of a mechanoelastic model that include a molecule-substrate interaction. This model reproduces well the main features observed experimentally and can predict how the spin-crossover transition is modified by the thickness and the substrate interaction.

8.
Chemistry ; 26(59): 13363-13366, 2020 Oct 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32598047

ABSTRACT

An original method for determining the handedness of individual non-centrosymmetric crystals in a mixture using a tightly-focused, circularly polarized X-ray beam is presented. The X-ray natural circular dichroism (XNCD) spectra recorded at the metal K-edge on selected crystals of [Δ-M(en)3 ](NO3 )2 and [Λ-M(en)3 ](NO3 )2 (M=CoII , NiII ) show extrema at the metal pre-edge (7712 eV for Co, 8335 eV for Ni). A mapping of a collection of some 220 crystals was performed at the respective energies by using left and right circular polarizations. The difference in absorption for the two polarizations, being either negative or positive, directly yielded the handedness of the crystal volume probed by the beam. By using this technique, it was found that the addition of l-ascorbic acid during the synthesis of [Co(en)3 ](NO3 )2 resulted in an enantiomeric enrichment of the Λ-isomer of 67±13 %, whereas the Ni analogue was similarly, but conversely, enriched in the Δ-isomer (65±22 %).

9.
Adv Mater ; 32(24): e2000566, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32390212

ABSTRACT

Magnetic crystals formed by 2D layers interacting by weak van der Waals forces are currently a hot research topic. When these crystals are thinned to nanometric size, they can manifest strikingly different magnetic behavior compared to the bulk form. This can be the result of, for example, quantum electronic confinement effects, the presence of defects, or pinning of the crystallographic structure in metastable phases induced by the exfoliation process. In this work, an investigation of the magnetism of micromechanically cleaved CrCl3 flakes with thickness >10 nm is performed. These flakes are characterized by superconducting quantum interference device magnetometry, surface-sensitive X-ray magnetic circular dichroism, and spatially resolved magnetic force microscopy. The results highlight an enhancement of the CrCl3 antiferromagnetic interlayer interaction that appears to be independent of the flake size when the thickness is tens of nanometers. The estimated exchange field is 9 kOe, representing an increase of ≈900% compared to the one of the bulk crystals. This effect can be attributed to the pinning of the high-temperature monoclinic structure, as recently suggested by polarized Raman spectroscopy investigations in thin (8-35 nm) CrCl3 flakes.

10.
Nanoscale ; 12(20): 11222-11231, 2020 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32412032

ABSTRACT

Fluids responding to magnetic fields (ferrofluids) offer a scene with no equivalent in nature to explore long-range magnetic dipole interactions. Here, we studied the very original class of binary ferrofluids, embedding soft and hard ferrimagnetic nanoparticles. We used a combination of X-ray magnetic spectroscopy measurements supported by multi-scale experimental techniques and Monte-Carlo simulations to unveil the origin of the emergent macroscopic magnetic properties of the binary mixture. We found that the association of soft and hard magnetic nanoparticles in the fluid has a considerable influence on their inherent magnetic properties. While the ferrofluid remains in a single phase, magnetic interactions at the nanoscale between both types of particles induce a modification of their respective coercive fields. By connecting the microscopic properties of binary ferrofluids containing small particles, our findings lay the groundwork for the manipulation of magnetic interactions between particles at the nanometer scale in magnetic liquids.

11.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(32): 13341-13346, 2020 Aug 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32348022

ABSTRACT

Light-induced spin-state switching is one of the most attractive properties of spin-crossover materials. In bulk, low-spin (LS) to high-spin (HS) conversion via the light-induced excited spin-state trapping (LIESST) effect may be achieved with a visible light, while the HS-to-LS one (reverse-LIESST) requires an excitation in the near-infrared range. Now, it is shown that those phenomena are strongly modified at the interface with a metal. Indeed, an anomalous spin conversion is presented from HS state to LS state under blue light illumination for FeII spin-crossover molecules that are in direct contact with metallic (111) single-crystal surfaces (copper, silver, and gold). To interpret this anomalous spin-state switching, a new mechanism is proposed for the spin conversion based on the light absorption by the substrate that can generate low energy valence photoelectrons promoting molecular vibrational excitations and subsequent spin-state switching at the molecule-metal interface.

12.
Nat Mater ; 19(5): 546-551, 2020 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32066930

ABSTRACT

Magnetic materials interfaced with superconductors may reveal new physical phenomena with potential for quantum technologies. The use of molecules as magnetic components has already shown great promise, but the diversity of properties offered by the molecular realm remains largely unexplored. Here we investigate a submonolayer of tetrairon(III) propeller-shaped single molecule magnets deposited on a superconducting lead surface. This material combination reveals a strong influence of the superconductor on the spin dynamics of the single molecule magnet. It is shown that the superconducting transition to the condensate state switches the single molecule magnet from a blocked magnetization state to a resonant quantum tunnelling regime. Our results open perspectives to control single molecule magnetism via superconductors and to use single molecule magnets as local probes of the superconducting state.

13.
Nanoscale ; 11(42): 20006-20014, 2019 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31603165

ABSTRACT

Thin films of an iron(ii) complex with a photochromic diarylethene-based ligand and featuring a spin-crossover behaviour have been grown by sublimation in ultra-high vacuum on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite and spectroscopically characterized through high-resolution X-ray and ultraviolet photoemission, as well as via X-ray absorption. Temperature-dependent studies demonstrated that the thermally induced spin-crossover is preserved at a sub-monolayer (0.7 ML) coverage. Although the photochromic ligand ad hoc integrated into the complex allows the photo-switching of the spin state of the complex at room temperature both in bulk and for a thick film on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite, this photomagnetic effect is not observed in sub-monolayer deposits. Ab initio calculations justify this behaviour as the result of specific adsorbate-substrate interactions leading to the stabilization of the photoinactive form of the diarylethene ligand over photoactive one on the surface.

14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(8): 3470-3479, 2019 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30501181

ABSTRACT

Molecular complexes based on Prussian Blue analogues have recently attracted considerable interest for their unique bistable properties combined to ultimately reduced dimensions. Here, we investigate the first dinuclear FeCo complex exhibiting both thermal and photomagnetic bistability in the solid state. Through an experimental and theoretical approach combining local techniques-X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD), and ligand field multiplet calculations-we were able to evidence the changes occurring at the atomic scale in the electronic and magnetic properties. The spectroscopic studies were able to fully support at the atomic level the following conclusions: (i) the 300 K phase and the light-induced excited state at 4 K are both built from FeLSIII-CoHSII paramagnetic pairs with no apparent reorganization of the local structure, (ii) the 100 K phase is composed of FeLSII-CoLSIII diamagnetic pairs, and (iii) the light-induced excited state is fully relaxed at an average temperature of ≈50 K. In the paramagnetic phase at 2 K, XAS and XMCD reveal that both Fe and Co ions exhibit a rather large orbital magnetic moment (0.65 µB and 0.46 µB, respectively, under an external magnetic induction of 6.5 T), but it was not possible to detect a magnetic interaction between spin centers above 2 K.

15.
Inorg Chem ; 57(13): 7610-7619, 2018 Jul 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29897743

ABSTRACT

CoFe Prussian blue analogues (PBAs) are well-known for their magnetic bistability tuned by external stimuli. The photoswitching properties are due to the electron transfer from CoLSIII-NC-FeLSII to CoHSII-NC-FeLSIII linkage, accompanied by the spin change of the Co ions (HS stands for high spin and LS for low spin). In this work, we investigated 100 nm particles of the Rb2Co4[Fe(CN)6]3.3·11H2O PBA (named RbCoFe). The photoexcited state of the PBA was reached by red laser excitation (λ = 635 nm) and observed by X-ray absorption spectroscopy and X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) that are element-specific probes. The XMCD measurements at the Co and Fe L2,3 edges, probing the magnetic 3d orbitals, have provided a direct evidence of the antiferromagnetic interaction between the CoHSII and the FeLSIII ions belonging to the core of the particles, thus confirming the previously published, though indirect XMCD measurements at K edges. Because of the surface sensitivity of XMCD at the L2,3 edges, the magnetic properties of the particle surface were also revealed. Surface CoHSII-FeLSIII pairs exhibit a weak ferromagnetic interaction. Thus, the magnetic structure of the photomagnetic RbCoFe 100 nm particles can be described as a ferrimagnetic core surrounded by a ferromagnetic shell. This finding brings new insights into the understanding of the complex magnetic properties of photoexcited RbCoFe and shows that the surface can have different magnetic behavior than the core. This should impact the nature of magnetic coupling in nanoparticles of CoFe PBA, where surface effect will dominate.

16.
Chem Sci ; 9(5): 1136-1143, 2018 Feb 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29675158

ABSTRACT

A simple procedure based on anion exchange was employed for the enantiomeric resolution of the extended metal atom chain (EMAC) [Co3(dpa)4(MeCN)2]2+. Use of the chiral salt (NBu4)2[As2(tartrate)2], (Λ-1 or Δ-1), resulted in the selective crystallization of the EMAC enantiomers as [Δ-Co3(dpa)4(MeCN)2](NBu4)2[Λ-As2(tartarte)2]2, (Δ-2) and [Λ-Co3(dpa)4(MeCN)2](NBu4)2[Δ-As2(tartrate)2]2 (Λ-2), respectively, in the P4212 space group, whereas a racemic mixture of 1 yielded [Co3(dpa)4(MeCN)2][As2(tartrate)2]·2MeCN (rac-3), which crystallized in the C2/c space group. The local electronic and magnetic structure of the EMAC enantiomers was studied, exploiting a variety of dichroisms in single crystals. A strong linear dichroism at the Co K-edge was observed in the orthoaxial configuration, whereas it vanished in the axial orientation, thus spectroscopically confirming the D4 crystal symmetry. Compounds Δ-2 and Λ-2 are shown to be enantiopure materials as evidenced by mirror-image natural circular dichroism spectra in the UV/vis in solution and in the X-ray range at the Co K-edge in single crystals. The surprising absence of detectable X-ray magnetic circular dichroism or X-ray magnetochiral dichroism signals at the Co K-edge, even at low temperature (3 K) and a high magnetic field (17 T), is ascribed to a strongly delocalized spin density on the tricobalt core.

17.
Small ; 14(5)2018 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29226595

ABSTRACT

The complexation between 2-ureido-4[1H]-pyrimidinone (UPy) and 2,7-diamido-1,8-naphthyridine (NaPy) is used to promote the mild chemisorption of a UPy-functionalized terbium(III) double decker system on a silicon surface. The adopted strategy allows the single-molecule magnet behavior of the system to be maintained unaltered on the surface.

18.
Nano Lett ; 17(3): 1899-1905, 2017 03 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28165249

ABSTRACT

The magnetic properties of some single molecule magnets (SMM) on surfaces can be strongly modified by the molecular packing in nanometric films/aggregates or by interactions with the substrate, which affect the molecular orientation and geometry. Detailed investigations of the magnetism of thin SMM films and nanostructures are necessary for the development of spin-based molecular devices, however this task is challenged by the limited sensitivity of laboratory-based magnetometric techniques and often requires access to synchrotron light sources to perform surface sensitive X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) investigations. Here we show that low-temperature magnetic force microscopy is an alternative powerful laboratory tool able to extract the field dependence of the magnetization and to identify areas of in-plane and perpendicular magnetic anisotropy in microarrays of the SMM terbium(III) bis-phthalocyaninato (TbPc2) neutral complex grown as nanosized films on SiO2 and perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxylic dianhydride (PTCDA), and this is in agreement with data extracted from nonlocal XMCD measurements performed on homogeneous TbPc2/PTCDA films.

19.
Chemistry ; 23(11): 2517-2521, 2017 Feb 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27981632

ABSTRACT

In a proof-of-principle study, a soluble macrocyclic single-molecule magnet (SMM) containing a CuII3 TbIII magnetic core was covalently grafted onto small gold nanoparticles pre-functionalised with carboxylate-terminated tethers. A modified microemulsion method allowed production of the small and monodisperse nanoparticles (approximately 3.5 nm in diameter) for the chemisorption of a large amount of intact macrocyclic complexes in the hybrid system.

20.
Nat Commun ; 7: 13646, 2016 12 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27929089

ABSTRACT

A challenge in molecular spintronics is to control the magnetic coupling between magnetic molecules and magnetic electrodes to build efficient devices. Here we show that the nature of the magnetic ion of anchored metal complexes highly impacts the exchange coupling of the molecules with magnetic substrates. Surface anchoring alters the magnetic anisotropy of the cobalt(II)-containing complex (Co(Pyipa)2), and results in blocking of its magnetization due to the presence of a magnetic hysteresis loop. In contrast, no hysteresis loop is observed in the isostructural nickel(II)-containing complex (Ni(Pyipa)2). Through XMCD experiments and theoretical calculations we find that Co(Pyipa)2 is strongly ferromagnetically coupled to the surface, while Ni(Pyipa)2 is either not coupled or weakly antiferromagnetically coupled to the substrate. These results highlight the importance of the synergistic effect that the electronic structure of a metal ion and the organic ligands has on the exchange interaction and anisotropy occurring at the molecule-electrode interface.

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