Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Magnetic Properties of π-Conjugated Hybrid Phenoxyl-Nitroxide Radicals with Extended π-Spin Delocalization. / Zaytseva, Elena; Shiomi, Daisuke; Ten, Yury et al.
In: The journal of physical chemistry. A, Vol. 124, No. 12, 04.03.2020, p. 2416-2426.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
}
TY - JOUR
T1 - Magnetic Properties of π-Conjugated Hybrid Phenoxyl-Nitroxide Radicals with Extended π-Spin Delocalization
AU - Zaytseva, Elena
AU - Shiomi, Daisuke
AU - Ten, Yury
AU - Gatilov, Yuri V.
AU - Lomanovich, Alyona
AU - Stass, Dmitri
AU - Bogomyakov, Artem
AU - Yu, Aixia
AU - Sugisaki, Kenji
AU - Sato, Kazunobu
AU - Takui, Takeji
AU - Bagryanskaya, Elena
AU - Mazhukin, Dmitrii
N1 - Funding Information: The authors thank Prof. Michael K. Bowman, Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, The University of Alabama for his reading through the manuscript and giving his useful suggestions. The authors thank Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation (State Contract 14. W03.31.0034) and JSPS-RFBR Grant 17-53-50043. We are thankful to the Multi-Access Chemical Research Center SB RAS for spectral and analytical measurements. This work was also supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research B (Grant 17H03012 and Grant 18H01955), Scientific Research C (Grant 18K03465 and Grant 17K05840), and Scientific Research S (Grant 19H05621) from the MEXT, Japan. This work was also supported by the AOARD Scientific Project on “Molecular Spins for Quantum Technologies” (Grant FA2386-17-1-4040, 4041), U.S. Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2020 American Chemical Society. Copyright: Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/3/4
Y1 - 2020/3/4
N2 - A series of stable and genuinely organic open-shell systems, π-conjugated phenoxyl-nitroxide free radicals (hybrid phenoxyl-nitroxide radicals), have been synthesized and their magnetic properties in the crystalline state investigated, revealing their usefulness as new building blocks for molecular magnetic materials. The salient electronic structure of the hybrid phenoxyl-nitroxide radicals is extended π-spin delocalization from the nitroxide moiety, mediating the localization effect intrinsic to nitroxide radicals. Five representative hybrid radicals containing an aliphatic, aromatic, and heteroaromatic substituent in the side part of the compact hybrid radical centers were synthesized, and their molecular/crystal structures in the crystalline state were determined by X-ray diffraction analyses. CW X-band ESR, 1H-ENDOR spectroscopy, and DFT calculations for the hybrid radicals confirmed that an unpaired spin delocalizes over the whole molecular frame including the nonconjugated fragments, suggesting the possibility of tuning their electronic properties through substituent effects in the crystalline state. Significant influence of the phenoxyl moiety on the electronic structure was analyzed in terms of the g-tensor calculations. The SQUID magnetization measurements revealed that the nitroxides bearing alkyl or aromatic substituents behave as 3D Curie-Weiss paramagnets with weak antiferromagnetic (AFM) (Θ = -1 to -2.6 K) or ferromagnetic (FM) (Θ = +0.33 K) spin-spin exchange interactions. On the other hand, heteroaromatically substituted hybrid phenoxyl-nitroxide showed significant AFM interactions with J/kB = -25.6 K. The analysis of the bulk magnetic properties based on the crystallographic data and DFT calculations revealed competition between the intermolecular AFM and FM interactions which originate from the C-O(phenoxyl)···Me(nitroxide) or (N)O-C(arom) infinite 1D head-to-tail chains and the C(arom)-C(arom) head-over-tail dimers forming 3D networks in their crystal lattices.
AB - A series of stable and genuinely organic open-shell systems, π-conjugated phenoxyl-nitroxide free radicals (hybrid phenoxyl-nitroxide radicals), have been synthesized and their magnetic properties in the crystalline state investigated, revealing their usefulness as new building blocks for molecular magnetic materials. The salient electronic structure of the hybrid phenoxyl-nitroxide radicals is extended π-spin delocalization from the nitroxide moiety, mediating the localization effect intrinsic to nitroxide radicals. Five representative hybrid radicals containing an aliphatic, aromatic, and heteroaromatic substituent in the side part of the compact hybrid radical centers were synthesized, and their molecular/crystal structures in the crystalline state were determined by X-ray diffraction analyses. CW X-band ESR, 1H-ENDOR spectroscopy, and DFT calculations for the hybrid radicals confirmed that an unpaired spin delocalizes over the whole molecular frame including the nonconjugated fragments, suggesting the possibility of tuning their electronic properties through substituent effects in the crystalline state. Significant influence of the phenoxyl moiety on the electronic structure was analyzed in terms of the g-tensor calculations. The SQUID magnetization measurements revealed that the nitroxides bearing alkyl or aromatic substituents behave as 3D Curie-Weiss paramagnets with weak antiferromagnetic (AFM) (Θ = -1 to -2.6 K) or ferromagnetic (FM) (Θ = +0.33 K) spin-spin exchange interactions. On the other hand, heteroaromatically substituted hybrid phenoxyl-nitroxide showed significant AFM interactions with J/kB = -25.6 K. The analysis of the bulk magnetic properties based on the crystallographic data and DFT calculations revealed competition between the intermolecular AFM and FM interactions which originate from the C-O(phenoxyl)···Me(nitroxide) or (N)O-C(arom) infinite 1D head-to-tail chains and the C(arom)-C(arom) head-over-tail dimers forming 3D networks in their crystal lattices.
KW - ORGANIC FERROMAGNET
KW - NITRONYL NITROXIDE
KW - PHASE CRYSTAL
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85082542475&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.jpca.9b11856
DO - 10.1021/acs.jpca.9b11856
M3 - Article
C2 - 32130857
AN - SCOPUS:85082542475
VL - 124
SP - 2416
EP - 2426
JO - Journal of Physical Chemistry A
JF - Journal of Physical Chemistry A
SN - 1089-5639
IS - 12
ER -
ID: 23906028