Slow Magnetic Relaxation with High Energy Barrier in Kramer Nd (III) Dinuclear Complex
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A dinuclear Nd(III) molecule, which features a phenoxide bridged and axial symmetry Nd(III) ions, exhibits slow magnetic relaxation. It demonstrates the most significant phenomenological energy barrier among the Nd-dimers. The ab initio calculations were validated by the experimentally derived magnetization dynamics.
Abstract
A dinuclear Nd(III) complex was synthesized and characterized via single-crystal X-ray diffraction and magnetic measurements. The crystal structure of [{Nd2(bbpen)2(H2O)2}Cl2] reveals the presence of symmetrically similar but crystallographically different two Nd(III) ions. In the dinuclear unit, phenoxide-bridged Nd(III) ions remain in distorted square antiprismatic (SAP) geometry. The anti-orientation of coordinated H2O makes intra-molecular hydrogen bonding with the axial phenoxide moiety. The presence of two external Cl− ions neutralized the charge of the dimeric unit. The AC magnetic properties of the complex showed field-induced single-molecule magnetic behavior. The dynamic magnetic relaxation was fitted using linear as well as nonlinear equations. The high-temperature linear fitting gives a thermal energy barrier of about 32 K, whereas fitting the entire temperature range with Orbach and quantum tunnelling of magnetization (QTM) relaxation processes provides a phenomenological energy barrier of 37 K. The energy barrier (Ueff ) of this Nd(III) complex is not only the highest for dinuclear Nd(III) single-molecule magnets (SMMs) but also one of the highest for polynuclear Nd(III)-based SMMs to date. The ab initio calculation further corroborated the experimentally obtained magnetization dynamics.




