Metal-organic magnets with large coercivity and ordering temperatures up to 242°C.
Panagiota S PerlepeItziar OyarzabalAaron MailmanMorgane YquelMikhail S PlatunovIurii N DovgaliukMathieu RouzièresPhilippe NégrierDenise MondieigElizaveta A SuturinaMarie-Anne DourgesSébastien BonhommeauRebecca A MusgraveKasper S PedersenDmitry ChernyshovFabrice WilhelmAndrei RogalevCorine MathonièreRodolphe CléracPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
Magnets derived from inorganic materials (e.g., oxides, rare-earth-based, and intermetallic compounds) are key components of modern technological applications. Despite considerable success in a broad range of applications, these inorganic magnets suffer several drawbacks, including energetically expensive fabrication, limited availability of certain constituent elements, high density, and poor scope for chemical tunability. A promising design strategy for next-generation magnets relies on the versatile coordination chemistry of abundant metal ions and inexpensive organic ligands. Following this approach, we report the general, simple, and efficient synthesis of lightweight, molecule-based magnets by postsynthetic reduction of preassembled coordination networks that incorporate chromium metal ions and pyrazine building blocks. The resulting metal-organic ferrimagnets feature critical temperatures up to 242°C and a 7500-oersted room-temperature coercivity.