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CO 2 -Sensitive Porous Magnet: Antiferromagnet Creation from a Paramagnetic Charge-Transfer Layered Metal-Organic Framework.

Jun ZhangWataru KosakaQingxin LiuNaoka AmamizuYasutaka KitagawaHitoshi Miyasaka
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Porous magnets that undergo a magnetic phase transition in response to gaseous adsorbates are desirable for the development of sustainable sensing and memory devices. Familiar gases such as O 2 and CO 2 are one class of target adsorbates because of their close association with life sciences and environmental issues; however, it is not easy to develop magnetic devices that respond to these ubiquitous gases. To date, only three examples of gas-responsive magnetic phase transitions have been demonstrated: (i) from a ferrimagnet to an antiferromagnet, (ii) its vice versa (i.e., change of magnetic phase), and (iii) from a ferrimagnet to a paramagnet (i.e., erasure of the magnetic phase). However, the creation of a magnet, meaning the change from a nonmagnet to a magnet by O 2 or CO 2 gas adsorption and magnetic switching by this phenomenon have not yet been explored. Herein, we report a CO 2 -induced antiferromagnet modified from a paramagnetic charge-flexible layered compound, [{Ru 2 (2,4-F 2 PhCO 2 ) 4 } 2 TCNQ(OEt) 2 ] ( 1 ; 2,4-F 2 PhCO 2 - = 2,4-difluorobenzoate; TCNQ(OEt) 2 = 2,5-diethoxy-7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinodimethane), where three molar equivalents of CO 2 was accommodated at a CO 2 pressure of 100 kPa. The magnetic change originates from charge fluctuation due to the transfer of electrons moving from the electron-donor to the electron-acceptor unit or vice versa, resulting in a change in the electron distribution induced by CO 2 adsorption/desorption in the donor-acceptor-type charge transfer framework. Owing to the reversible electronic state change upon CO 2 adsorption/desorption, these magnetic phases are switched, accompanied by modification of the electrical conductivity, which is boosted by the CO 2 accommodation. This is the first example of the creation of a CO 2 -responsive magnet, which is promising for novel molecular multifunctional devices.
Keyphrases
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