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Chemical tunnel-splitting-engineering in a dysprosium-based molecular nanomagnet

Authors :
Danish Council for Independent Research
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
European Commission
Oticon Foundation
University of Stuttgart
German Research Foundation
Danish Research Council
Swiss National Science Foundation
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Augustinus Foundation
Sørensen, Mikkel A.
Hansen, Ursula B.
Perfetti, Mauro
Pedersen, Kasper S.
Bartolomé, Elena
Simeoni, Giovanna G.
Mutka, Hannu
Rols, Stéphane
Jeong, Minki
Zivkovic, Ivika
Retuerto, María
Arauzo, Ana B.
Bartolomé, Juan
Piligkos, Stergios
Weihe, Høgni
Doerrer, Linda H.
Slageren, Joris van
Rønnow, Henrik M.
Lefmann, Kim
Bendix, Jesper
Danish Council for Independent Research
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
European Commission
Oticon Foundation
University of Stuttgart
German Research Foundation
Danish Research Council
Swiss National Science Foundation
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Augustinus Foundation
Sørensen, Mikkel A.
Hansen, Ursula B.
Perfetti, Mauro
Pedersen, Kasper S.
Bartolomé, Elena
Simeoni, Giovanna G.
Mutka, Hannu
Rols, Stéphane
Jeong, Minki
Zivkovic, Ivika
Retuerto, María
Arauzo, Ana B.
Bartolomé, Juan
Piligkos, Stergios
Weihe, Høgni
Doerrer, Linda H.
Slageren, Joris van
Rønnow, Henrik M.
Lefmann, Kim
Bendix, Jesper
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Total control over the electronic spin relaxation in molecular nanomagnets is the ultimate goal in the design of new molecules with evermore realizable applications in spin-based devices. For single-ion lanthanide systems, with strong spin-orbit coupling, the potential applications are linked to the energetic structure of the crystal field levels and quantum tunneling within the ground state. Structural engineering of the timescale of these tunneling events via appropriate design of crystal fields represents a fundamental challenge for the synthetic chemist, since tunnel splittings are expected to be suppressed by crystal field environments with sufficiently high-order symmetry. Here, we report the long missing study of the effect of a non-linear (C4) to pseudo-linear (D4d) change in crystal field symmetry in an otherwise chemically unaltered dysprosium complex. From a purely experimental study of crystal field levels and electronic spin dynamics at milliKelvin temperatures, we demonstrate the ensuing threefold reduction of the tunnel splitting.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1257717575
Document Type :
Electronic Resource