Crystalline Arrays of Copper Porphyrin Qubits Based on Ion-Paired Frameworks.
Casandra M MoisanuRobert M JacobbergerLuke P SkalaCharlotte L SternMichael R WasielewskiWilliam R DichtelPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Molecular electronic spin qubits have great potential for use in quantum information science applications because their structure can be rationally tuned using synthetic chemistry. Their integration into a new class of materials, ion-paired frameworks, allows for the formation of ordered arrays of these molecular spin qubits. Three ion-paired frameworks with varying densities of paramagnetic Cu(II) porphyrins were isolated as micron-sized crystals suitable for characterization by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Pulse-electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy probed the spin coherence of these materials at temperatures up to 140 K. The crystals with the longest Cu-Cu distances had a spin-spin relaxation time ( T m ) of 207 ns and a spin-lattice relaxation time ( T 1 ) of 1.8 ms at 5 K, which decreased at elevated temperature because of spin-phonon coupling. Crystals with shorter Cu-Cu distances also had lower T 1 values because of enhanced cross-relaxation from qubit-qubit dipolar coupling. Frameworks with shorter Cu-Cu distances exhibited lower T m values because of the increased interactions between qubits within the frameworks. Incorporating molecular electronic spin qubits in ion-paired frameworks enables control of composition, spacing, and interqubit interactions, providing a rational means to extend spin relaxation times.
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