Materials (Nov 2021)

Thin Films of Nanocrystalline Fe(pz)[Pt(CN)<sub>4</sub>] Deposited by Resonant Matrix-Assisted Pulsed Laser Evaporation

  • Dominik Maskowicz,
  • Rafał Jendrzejewski,
  • Wioletta Kopeć,
  • Maria Gazda,
  • Jakub Karczewski,
  • Paweł Niedziałkowski,
  • Armin Kleibert,
  • Carlos A. F. Vaz,
  • Yann Garcia,
  • Mirosław Sawczak

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14237135
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 23
p. 7135

Abstract

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Prior studies of the thin film deposition of the metal-organic compound of Fe(pz)Pt[CN]4 (pz = pyrazine) using the matrix-assisted pulsed laser evaporation (MAPLE) method, provided evidence for laser-induced decomposition of the molecular structure resulting in a significant downshift of the spin transition temperature. In this work we report new results obtained with a tunable pulsed laser, adjusted to water resonance absorption band with a maximum at 3080 nm, instead of 1064 nm laser, to overcome limitations related to laser–target interactions. Using this approach, we obtain uniform and functional thin films of Fe(pz)Pt[CN]4 nanoparticles with an average thickness of 135 nm on Si and/or glass substrates. X-ray diffraction measurements show the crystalline structure of the film identical to that of the reference material. The temperature-dependent Raman spectroscopy indicates the spin transition in the temperature range of 275 to 290 K with 15 ± 3 K hysteresis. This result is confirmed by UV-Vis spectroscopy revealing an absorption band shift from 492 to 550 nm related to metal-to-ligand-charge-transfer (MLCT) for high and low spin states, respectively. Spin crossover is also observed with X-ray absorption spectroscopy, but due to soft X-ray-induced excited spin state trapping (SOXIESST) the transition is not complete and shifted towards lower temperatures.

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