Nature Communications (Apr 2024)

Slow magnetic relaxation in a europium(II) complex

  • Dylan Errulat,
  • Katie L. M. Harriman,
  • Diogo A. Gálico,
  • Elvin V. Salerno,
  • Johan van Tol,
  • Akseli Mansikkamäki,
  • Mathieu Rouzières,
  • Stephen Hill,
  • Rodolphe Clérac,
  • Muralee Murugesu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46196-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Single-ion anisotropy is vital for the observation of Single-Molecule Magnet (SMM) properties (i.e., a slow dynamics of the magnetization) in lanthanide-based systems. In the case of europium, the occurrence of this phenomenon has been inhibited by the spin and orbital quantum numbers that give way to J = 0 in the trivalent state and the half-filled population of the 4f orbitals in the divalent state. Herein, by optimizing the local crystal field of a quasi-linear bis(silylamido) EuII complex, the [EuII(N{SiMePh2}2)2] SMM is described, providing an example of a europium complex exhibiting slow relaxation of its magnetization. This behavior is dominated by a thermally activated (Orbach-like) mechanism, with an effective energy barrier of approximately 8 K, determined by bulk magnetometry and electron paramagnetic resonance. Ab initio calculations confirm second-order spin-orbit coupling effects lead to non-negligible axial magnetic anisotropy, splitting the ground state multiplet into four Kramers doublets, thereby allowing for the observation of an Orbach-like relaxation at low temperatures.