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Locking and Unlocking the Molecular Spin Crossover Transition

  • Xin Zhang
  • , Paulo S. Costa
  • , James Hooper
  • , Daniel P. Miller
  • , Alpha T. N'Diaye
  • , Sumit Beniwal
  • , Xuanyuan Jiang
  • , Yuewei Yin
  • , Patrick Rosa
  • , Lucie Routaboul
  • , Mathieu Gonidec
  • , Lorenzo Poggini
  • , Pierre Braunstein
  • , Bernard Doudin
  • , Xiaoshan Xu
  • , Axel Enders
  • , Eva Zurek
  • , Peter A. Dowben
  • University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  • Jagiellonian University in Kraków
  • SUNY Buffalo
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Université de Bordeaux
  • Université de Strasbourg
  • University of Bayreuth

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

66 Scopus citations

Abstract

The Fe(II) spin crossover complex [Fe{H2B(pz)2}2(bipy)] (pz = pyrazol-1-yl, bipy = 2,2′-bipyridine) can be locked in a largely low-spin-state configuration over a temperature range that includes temperatures well above the thermal spin crossover temperature of 160 K. This locking of the spin state is achieved for nanometer thin films of this complex in two distinct ways: through substrate interactions with dielectric substrates such as SiO2 and Al2O3, or in powder samples by mixing with the strongly dipolar zwitterionic p-benzoquinonemonoimine C6H2(—⋯ NH2)2(—⋯ O)2. Remarkably, it is found in both cases that incident X-ray fluences then restore the [Fe{H2B(pz)2}2(bipy)] moiety to an electronic state characteristic of the high spin state at temperatures of 200 K to above room temperature; that is, well above the spin crossover transition temperature for the pristine powder, and well above the temperatures characteristic of light- or X-ray-induced excited-spin-state trapping. Heating slightly above room temperature allows the initial locked state to be restored. These findings, supported by theory, show how the spin crossover transition can be manipulated reversibly around room temperature by appropriate design of the electrostatic and chemical environment.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1702257
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume29
Issue number39
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 18 2017

Keywords

  • spin crossover transition
  • spin-state locking
  • substrate interactions
  • X-ray excited spin states
  • zwitterionic complexes

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