Crystals (Jun 2019)

Spin Transition in the Cu(hfac)<sub>2</sub> Complex with (4-Ethylpyridin-3-yl)-Substituted Nitronyl Nitroxide Caused by the “Asymmetric” Structural Rearrangement of Exchange Clusters in the Heterospin Molecule

  • Natalia Artiukhova,
  • Galina Romanenko,
  • Gleb Letyagin,
  • Artem Bogomyakov,
  • Sergey Veber,
  • Olga Minakova,
  • Marina Petrova,
  • Vitaliy Morozov,
  • Victor Ovcharenko

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst9060285
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. 285

Abstract

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Methods for the synthesis of binuclear [Cu(hfac)2LEt]2 and tetranuclear [[Cu(hfac)2]4(LEt)2] heterospin compounds based on copper hexafluoroacetylacetonate [Cu(hfac)2] and 2-(4-ethylpyridin-3-yl)-4,5-bis(spirocyclopentyl)-4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazole-3-oxide-1-oxyl (LEt), were developed. The crystals of the complexes are elastic and do not crash during repeated cooling−heating cycles. It was found that a singlet−triplet conversion occurred in all of the {Cu(II)−O•−N<} exchange clusters in the molecules of the binuclear [Cu(hfac)2LEt]2 which led to spin coupling with cooling. The transition occurred in a wide temperature range with a maximum gradient ΔχT at ≈180 K. The structural transformation of the crystals takes place at T < 200 K and is accompanied by the lowering of symmetry from monoclinic to triclinic, twinning, and a considerable shortening of the Cu−ONO distance (2.19 and 1.97 Å at 295 and 50 K, respectively). For the tetranuclear [[Cu(hfac)2]4(LEt)2], two structural transitions were recorded (at ≈154 K and ≈118 K), which led to a considerable change in the spatial position of the Et substituent in the nitronyl nitroxyl fragment. The low-temperature process was accompanied by a spin transition recorded as a hysteresis loop on the χT(T) curve during the repeated cooling−heating cycles (T½↑ = 122 K, T½↓ = 115 K). This transition is unusual because it causes spin coupling in half of all of the {>N−•O−Cu2+} terminal exchange clusters, leading to spin compensation for only two paramagnetic centers of the six centers in the molecule.

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