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Dalton Transactions | 2010

Magnetic quantum tunneling: insights from simple molecule-based magnets

Stephen Hill; Saiti Datta; Junjie Liu; Ross Inglis; Constantinos J. Milios; Patrick L. Feng; J. J. Henderson; Enrique del Barco; Euan K. Brechin; David N. Hendrickson

This perspectives article takes a broad view of the current understanding of magnetic bistability and magnetic quantum tunneling in single-molecule magnets (SMMs), focusing on three families of relatively simple, low-nuclearity transition metal clusters: spin S = 4 Ni(II)(4), Mn(III)(3) (S = 2 and 6) and Mn(III)(6) (S = 4 and 12). The Mn(III) complexes are related by the fact that they contain triangular Mn(III)(3) units in which the exchange may be switched from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic without significantly altering the coordination around the Mn(III) centers, thereby leaving the single-ion physics more-or-less unaltered. This allows for a detailed and systematic study of the way in which the individual-ion anisotropies project onto the molecular spin ground state in otherwise identical low- and high-spin molecules, thus providing unique insights into the key factors that control the quantum dynamics of SMMs, namely: (i) the height of the kinetic barrier to magnetization relaxation; and (ii) the transverse interactions that cause tunneling through this barrier. Numerical calculations are supported by an unprecedented experimental data set (17 different compounds), including very detailed spectroscopic information obtained from high-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance and low-temperature hysteresis measurements. Comparisons are made between the giant spin and multi-spin phenomenologies. The giant spin approach assumes the ground state spin, S, to be exact, enabling implementation of simple anisotropy projection techniques. This methodology provides a basic understanding of the concept of anisotropy dilution whereby the cluster anisotropy decreases as the total spin increases, resulting in a barrier that depends weakly on S. This partly explains why the record barrier for a SMM (86 K for Mn(6)) has barely increased in the 15 years since the first studies of Mn(12)-acetate, and why the tiny Mn(3) molecule can have a barrier approaching 60% of this record. Ultimately, the giant spin approach fails to capture all of the key physics, although it works remarkably well for the purely ferromagnetic cases. Nevertheless, diagonalization of the multi-spin Hamiltonian matrix is necessary in order to fully capture the interplay between exchange and local anisotropy, and the resultant spin-state mixing which ultimately gives rise to the tunneling matrix elements in the high symmetry SMMs (ferromagnetic Mn(3) and Ni(4)). The simplicity (low-nuclearity, high-symmetry, weak disorder, etc.) of the molecules highlighted in this study proves to be of crucial importance. Not only that, these simple molecules may be considered among the best SMMs: Mn(6) possesses the record anisotropy barrier, and Mn(3) is the first SMM to exhibit quantum tunneling selection rules that reflect the intrinsic symmetry of the molecule.


Dalton Transactions | 2012

Multi-frequency EPR studies of a mononuclear holmium single-molecule magnet based on the polyoxometalate [HoIII(W5O18)2]9−

Sanhita Ghosh; Saiti Datta; Lisa Friend; Salvador Cardona-Serra; Alejandro Gaita-Ariño; Eugenio Coronado; Stephen Hill

Continuous-wave, multi-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies are reported for a series of single-crystal and powder samples containing different dilutions of a recently discovered mononuclear Ho(III) (4f(10)) single-molecule magnet (SMM) encapsulated in a highly symmetric polyoxometalate (POM) cage. The encapsulation offers the potential for applications in molecular spintronics devices, as it preserves the intrinsic properties of the nanomagnet outside of the crystal. A significant magnetic anisotropy arises due to a splitting of the Hunds coupled total angular momentum (J = L + S = 8) ground state in the POM ligand field. Thus, high-frequency (50.4 GHz) EPR studies reveal a highly anisotropic eight line spectrum corresponding to transitions within the lowest m(J) = ±4 doublet, split by a strong hyperfine interaction with the I = 7/2 Ho nucleus (100% natural abundance). X-band EPR studies reveal the presence of an appreciable tunneling gap between the m(J) = ±4 doublet states having the same nuclear spin projection, leading to a highly non-linear field-dependence of the spectrum at low-frequencies.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Magnetic anisotropy in a heavy atom radical ferromagnet.

Stephen M. Winter; Saiti Datta; Stephen Hill; Richard T. Oakley

High-field, single-crystal EPR spectroscopy on a tetragonal bisdiselenazolyl ferromagnet has provided evidence for the presence of easy-axis magnetic anisotropy, with the crystallographic c axis as the easy axis and the ab plane as the hard plane. The observation of a zero-field gap in the resonance frequency is interpreted in terms of an anisotropy field several orders of magnitude larger than that observed in light-heteroatom, nonmetallic ferromagnets and comparable (on a per-site basis) to that observed in hexagonal close packed cobalt. The results indicate that large spin-orbit-induced magnetic anisotropies, typically associated with 3d-orbital-based ferromagnets, can also be found in heavy p-block radicals, suggesting that there may be major opportunities for the development of heavy p-block organic magnetic materials.


Physical Review B | 2009

Crystal Lattice Desolvation Effects On The Magnetic Quantum Tunneling Of Single-Molecule Magnets

Gage Redler; Christos Lampropoulos; Saiti Datta; Changhyun Koo; Theocharis C. Stamatatos; Nicole E. Chakov; George Christou; Stephen Hill

High-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance (HFEPR) and alternating current (ac) susceptibility measurements are reported for a new high-symmetry


Physical Review B | 2007

Direct observation of mixing of spin multiplets in an antiferromagnetic molecular nanomagnet by electron paramagnetic resonance

Saiti Datta; Oliver Waldmann; Andrew D. Kent; V. A. Milway; Laurence K. Thompson; Stephen Hill

{\text{Mn}}_{12}


Physical Review B | 2010

Magnetic anisotropy in thin films of Prussian blue analogues

Daniel M. Pajerowski; Justin E. Gardner; Matthew J. Andrus; Saiti Datta; Ariel Gómez; Stefan Kycia; Stephen Hill; Daniel R. Talham; Mark W. Meisel

complex,


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Geometric-phase interference in a Mn12 single-molecule magnet with fourfold rotational symmetry.

S T Adams; E H da Silva Neto; Saiti Datta; J F Ware; Christos Lampropoulos; George Christou; Yuri Myaesoedov; E. Zeldov; Jonathan R. Friedman

[{\text{Mn}}_{12}{\text{O}}_{12}{({\text{O}}_{2}{\text{CCH}}_{3})}_{16}{({\text{CH}}_{3}\text{OH})}_{4}]\ensuremath{\cdot}{\text{CH}}_{3}\text{OH}


Journal of Applied Physics | 2011

Electron magnetic resonance studies of the Pr3Ga5SiO14 and Nd3Ga5SiO14 kagomé systems

Sanhita Ghosh; Saiti Datta; Haidong Zhou; Michael Hoch; C. R. Wiebe; Stephen Hill

. The results are compared to those of other high-symmetry spin


Journal of Applied Physics | 2008

Transverse anisotropy in the mixed-valent Mn2IIMn4IIIMn3IV single-molecule magnet

Saiti Datta; Constantinos J. Milios; Euan K. Brechin; Stephen Hill

S=10\text{ }{\text{Mn}}_{12}


Dalton Transactions | 2009

Attempting to understand (and control) the relationship between structure and magnetism in an extended family of Mn6 single-molecule magnets

Ross Inglis; Leigh F. Jones; Constantinos J. Milios; Saiti Datta; Anna Collins; Simon Parsons; Wolfgang Wernsdorfer; Stephen Hill; Spyros P. Perlepes; Stergios Piligkos; Euan K. Brechin

single-molecule magnets (SMMs), including the original acetate,

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Stephen Hill

Florida State University

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Sanhita Ghosh

Florida State University

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Haidong Zhou

University of Tennessee

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Ross Inglis

University of Edinburgh

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