Login / Signup

Dynamic spin interchange in a tridentate Fe(iii) Schiff-base compound.

Ana I VicenteAbhinav JosephLiliana P FerreiraMaria de Deus CarvalhoVítor H N RodriguesMathieu DuttineHermínio P DiogoManuel E Minas da PiedadeMaria José CalhordaPaulo N Martinho
Published in: Chemical science (2016)
The thermosalient effect is still a rare and poorly understood phenomenon, where crystals suddenly jump, bend, twist or explode upon undergoing a thermally activated phase transition. The synthesis and characterisation of the new spin transition Fe(iii) compound [Fe(5-Br-salEen)2][ClO4] (salEen = N-ethyl-N-(2-aminoethyl)salicylaldiminate) is described and its thermosalient behaviour reported. It is the first example of a thermosalient effect with a spin transition and magnetic, calorimetric, diffraction, microscopy and computational studies are used to characterise these effects. Both thermosalient effect and spin transition occur around 320 K upon heating and are accompanied by an anisotropic unit cell change with conservation of crystal symmetry that causes a large enough stress of the crystal lattice to induce crystal explosion. This stress can ultimately be traced back to a diffusionless and distortive structural perturbation resulting in a coupled spin transition-thermosalient effect.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • single molecule
  • density functional theory
  • stem cells
  • high throughput
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • cell therapy
  • bone marrow
  • single cell
  • transition metal
  • stress induced
  • molecularly imprinted