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Bis-Alkoxide Dysprosium(III) Crown Ether Complexes Exhibit Tunable Air Stability and Record Energy Barrier.

Wen-Jie XuQian-Cheng LuoZi-Han LiYuan-Qi ZhaiYan-Zhen Zheng
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2024)
High-performance and air-stable single-molecule magnets (SMMs) can offer great convenience for the fabrication of information storage devices. However, the controversial requisition of high stability and magnetic axiality is hard to balance for lanthanide-based SMMs. Here, a family of dysprosium(III) crown ether complexes possessing hexagonal-bipyramidal (pseudo-D 6h symmetry) local coordination geometry with tunable air stability and effective energy barrier for magnetization reversal (U eff ) are shown. The three complexes share the common formula of [Dy(18-C-6)L 2 ][I 3 ] (18-C-6 = 1,4,7,10,13,16-hexaoxacyclooctadecane; L = I, 1; L = O t Bu 2 and L = 1-AdO 3). 1 is highly unstable in the air. 2 can survive in the air for a few minutes, while 3 remains unchanged in the air for more than 1 week. This is roughly in accordance with the percentage of buried volumes of the axial ligands. More strikingly, 2 and 3 show progressive enhancement of U eff and 3 exhibits a record high U eff of 2427(19) K, which significantly contributes to the 100 s blocking temperature up to 11 K for Yttrium-diluted sample, setting a new benchmark for solid-state air-stable SMMs.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • atomic force microscopy
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