Coercive Fields Exceeding 30 T in the Mixed-Valence Single-Molecule Magnet (CpiPr5)2Ho2I3

Hyunchul Kwon, K. Randall McClain, Jon G. C. Kragskow, Jakob K. Staab, Mykhaylo Ozerov, Katie R. Meihaus, Benjamin G. Harvey, Eun Sang Choi, Nicholas F. Chilton, Jeffrey R. Long

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Mixed-valence dilanthanide complexes of the type (CpiPr5)2Ln2I3 (CpiPr5 = pentaisopropylcyclopentadienyl; Ln = Gd, Tb, Dy) featuring a direct Ln–Ln σ-bonding interaction have been shown to exhibit well-isolated high-spin ground states and, in the case of the Tb and Dy variants, a strong axial magnetic anisotropy that gives rise to a large magnetic coercivity. Here, we report the synthesis and characterization of two new mixed-valence dilanthanide compounds in this series, (CpiPr5)2Ln2I3 (1-Ln; Ln = Ho, Er). Both compounds feature a Ln–Ln bonding interaction, the first such interaction in any molecular compounds of Ho or Er. Like the Tb and Dy congeners, both complexes exhibit high-spin ground states arising from strong spin–spin coupling between the lanthanide 4f electrons and a single σ-type lanthanide–lanthanide bonding electron. Beyond these similarities, however, the magnetic properties of the two compounds diverge. In particular, 1-Er does not exhibit observable magnetic blocking or slow magnetic relaxation, while 1-Ho exhibits magnetic blocking below 28 K, which is the highest temperature among Ho-based single-molecule magnets, and a spin reversal barrier of 556(4) cm–1. Additionally, variable-field magnetization data collected for 1-Ho reveal a coercive field of greater than 32 T below 8 K, more than 6-fold higher than observed for the bulk magnets SmCo5 and Nd2Fe14B, and the highest coercive field reported to date for any single-molecule magnet or molecule-based magnetic material. Multiconfigurational calculations, supported by far-infrared magnetospectroscopy data, reveal that the stark differences in magnetic properties of 1-Ho and 1-Er arise from differences in the local magnetic anisotropy of the lanthanide centers.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)18714-18721
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume146
Issue number27
Early online date26 Jun 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Aug 2024

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