Nitrogen-Vacancy Magnetometry of Individual Fe-Triazole Spin Crossover Nanorods.
Suvechhya LamichhaneKayleigh A McElveenAdam EricksonIlja FescenkoShuo SunRupak TimalsinaYinsheng GuoSy-Hwang LiouRebecca Y LaiAbdelghani LaraouiPublished in: ACS nano (2023)
[Fe(Htrz) 2 (trz)](BF 4 ) (Fe-triazole) spin crossover molecules show thermal, electrical, and optical switching between high spin (HS) and low spin (LS) states, making them promising candidates for molecular spintronics. The LS and HS transitions originate from the electronic configurations of Fe(II) and are considered to be diamagnetic and paramagnetic, respectively. The Fe(II) LS state has six paired electrons in the ground states with no interaction with the magnetic field and a diamagnetic behavior is usually observed. While the bulk magnetic properties of Fe-triazole compounds are widely studied by standard magnetometry techniques, their magnetic properties at the individual level are missing. Here we use nitrogen vacancy (NV) based magnetometry to study the magnetic properties of the Fe-triazole LS state of nanoparticle clusters and individual nanorods of size varying from 20 to 1000 nm. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and Raman spectroscopy are performed to determine the size of the nanoparticles/nanorods and to confirm their respective spin states. The magnetic field patterns produced by the nanoparticles/nanorods are imaged by NV magnetic microscopy as a function of applied magnetic field (up to 350 mT) and correlated with SEM and Raman. We found that in most of the nanorods the LS state is slightly paramagnetic, possibly originating from the surface oxidation and/or the greater Fe(III) presence along the nanorods' edges. NV measurements on the Fe-triazole LS state nanoparticle clusters revealed both diamagnetic and paramagnetic behavior. Our results highlight the potential of NV quantum sensors to study the magnetic properties of spin crossover molecules and molecular magnets.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- room temperature
- density functional theory
- metal organic framework
- raman spectroscopy
- molecularly imprinted
- aqueous solution
- visible light
- high resolution
- electron microscopy
- clinical trial
- high throughput
- randomized controlled trial
- open label
- placebo controlled
- single cell
- optical coherence tomography
- solid phase extraction
- study protocol