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Bistability in Organic Magnetic Materials: A Comparative Study of the Key Differences between Hysteretic and Non-hysteretic Spin Transitions in Dithiazolyl Radicals.

Sergi VelaMichael B ReardonCharles E JakobscheMark M TurnbullJordi Ribas-AriñoJuan J Novoa
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2017)
Dithiazolyl (DTA)-based radicals have furnished many examples of organic spin-transition materials, some of them occurring with hysteresis and some others without. Herein, we present a combined computational and experimental study aimed at deciphering the factors controlling the existence or absence of hysteresis by comparing the phase transitions of 4-cyanobenzo-1,3,2-dithiazolyl and 1,3,5-trithia-2,4,6-triazapentalenyl radicals, which are prototypical examples of non-bistable and bistable spin transitions, respectively. Both materials present low-temperature diamagnetic and high-temperature paramagnetic structures, characterized by dimerized (⋅⋅⋅A-A⋅⋅⋅A-A⋅⋅⋅)n and regular (⋅⋅⋅A⋅⋅⋅A⋅⋅⋅A⋅⋅⋅A⋅⋅⋅)n π-stacks of radicals, respectively. We show that the regular π-stacks are not potential energy minima but average structures arising from a dynamic inter-conversion between two degenerate dimerized configurations: (⋅⋅⋅A-A⋅⋅⋅A-A⋅⋅⋅)n ↔(-A⋅⋅⋅A-A⋅⋅⋅A-)n . The emergence of this intra-stack dynamics upon heating gives rise to a second-order phase transition that is responsible for the change in the dominant magnetic interactions of the system. This suggests that the promotion of a (⋅⋅⋅A-A⋅⋅⋅A-A⋅⋅⋅)n ↔(-A⋅⋅⋅A-A⋅⋅⋅A-)n dynamics is a general mechanism for triggering spin transitions in DTA-based materials. Yet, this intra-stack dynamics does not suffice to generate bistability, which also requires a rearrangement of the intermolecular bonds between the π-stacks via a first-order phase transition.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • density functional theory
  • single molecule
  • transition metal
  • high temperature
  • high resolution
  • molecularly imprinted