Tunable valence tautomerism in lanthanide-organic alloys.
Maja A DunstanAnna S ManvellNathan J YutronkieFrédéric AribotJesper BendixAndrei RogalevKasper S PedersenPublished in: Nature chemistry (2024)
The inimitable electronic structures of the lanthanide (Ln) ions are key to advanced materials and technologies involving these elements. The trivalent ions are ubiquitous and are used much more widely than the divalent and tetravalent analogues, which possess vastly different optical and magnetic properties. Hence, alteration of the valence electron count by external stimuli can lead to dramatic changes in materials properties. Compounds exhibiting a temperature-induced complete Ln(III) ⇄ Ln(II) switch, referred to as a valence tautomeric (VT) transition, are rare. Here we present an abrupt and hysteretic VT transition in a lanthanide-based coordination polymer, SmI 2 (pyrazine) 3 , driven by the interconversion of Sm(II)-pyrazine(0) and Sm(III)-pyrazine(·-) redox pairs. Alloying SmI 2 (pyrazine) 3 with Yb(II) yields isomorphous Sm 1-x Yb x I 2 (pyrazine) 3 solid solutions with VT transition critical temperatures ranging widely from 200 K to ∼50 K at ambient pressure. These findings demonstrate a simple strategy to realize thermally switchable magnetic materials with chemically tunable transition temperatures.