| Literature DB >> 30842867 |
Mauro Perfetti1, Maren Gysler1, Yvonne Rechkemmer-Patalen1, Peng Zhang1, Hatice Taştan1, Florian Fischer1, Julia Netz1, Wolfgang Frey2, Lucas W Zimmermann3, Thomas Schleid3, Michael Hakl4, Milan Orlita4,5, Liviu Ungur6, Liviu Chibotaru6, Theis Brock-Nannestad7, Stergios Piligkos7, Joris van Slageren1.
Abstract
We present the in-depth determination of the magnetic properties and electronic structure of the luminescent and volatile dysprosium-based single molecule magnet [Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30842867 PMCID: PMC6375364 DOI: 10.1039/c8sc03170c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1Chemical structure of the Dy derivative. Colour code: Dy-pale blue, O-red, N-blue, F-green, C-grey, H atoms were omitted for clarity. The pale blue ellipsoids are the susceptibility tensors () experimentally obtained with torque magnetometry. The smallest (x and y) components of the tensor were magnified by a factor 10 for clarity reasons.
Fig. 2Experimental (green) and fitted (black) energy level splitting. The inset is a zoom on the ground 6H15/2 term, where also the ab initio (red) energies are reported.
Fig. 3Experimental (symbols), fitted (black line) and ab initio calculated (red line) product of the temperature times the magnetic susceptibility of a powder sample of Dy, recorded with a static magnetic field B = 0.1 T. The dotted line represents the Curie constant for two independent Dy3+ ions. Inset: magnetization recorded at T = 1.8 K with fields up to 7 T, same color code.
Fig. 4Hysteresis curves recorded on powder samples of Dy and Dy@Y at 1.8 K with field sweep rates of 100 Oe s–1. The lines are the ab initio calculated energy levels.
Fig. 5(a) Experimental (triangles) and fitted (solid lines) frequency dependence of the imaginary component of the magnetic susceptibility (χ′′) at B = 0 T. (b) Relaxation times (symbols) extracted from χ′′ fit at various temperatures and for Dy at B = 0 T (red triangles) and at B = 0.1 T (blue dots) and for 4% Dy diluted in Y (black diamonds). Lines represent the best fits (see text).
Best fit values of the relaxation time in zero (Dy, first row and 4% Dy in Y, third row) and 0.1 T (Dy, second row and 4% Dy in Y, forth row) applied dc field
| Sample | Field ( |
|
|
|
|
| 0 | 0.761(7) | 1.32(3) × 10–2 | 4.79(2) |
| 0.1 | — | 1.85(2) × 10–3 | 5.52(5) | |
| 4% Dy in | 0 | 0.32(1) | 3.8(4) × 10–2 | 4.38(6) |
| 0.1 | — | 1.57(2) × 10–3 | 5.54(5) |
Fig. 6Experimental (dots) and best fit (solid lines) luminescence spectrum belonging to the 4F9/2 → 6H15/2 transition of Dy3+. The green line represents the sum of Gaussians (dashed lines) used for the fit. The black ticks are the extracted positions of the energy levels.
Fig. 7Best fit energy level diagrams on the basis of CF Hamiltonians containing only those terms belonging to the indicated symmetries.
Fig. 8Eigenstate energies and Ĵ expectation values resulting from the CF fit in C2v (left) and C1 symmetries (right). A minute magnetic field (1 pT) was applied in the calculation of the expectation value to avoid obtaining arbitrary superpositions of + and – states. The thickness and colour of the lines are a measure of the magnetic transition moments between the states connected by those lines.
Fig. 9Rotation 1 (top) and rotation 2 (bottom) performed on a single crystal of Dy using CTM (see ESI† for details). Symbols refer to the experimental points while lines are the best fits.