Herein, we report a new trigonal prismatic cobalt(II) complex that behaves as a single molecule magnet. The obtained zero-field splitting, which is also directly accessed by THz-EPR spectroscopy (-102.5 cm ), results in a large magnetization reversal barrier U of 205 cm .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVariable-temperature NMR spectroscopy has recently emerged as a new alternative to the magnetometry methods for studying single molecule magnets. Its use is based on an accurate determination of magnetic susceptibility tensor anisotropy Δχ, which is not always achievable due to some contact contribution to NMR chemical shifts and possible conformational dynamics. Here, we applied this approach to cholesteryl-substituted cage cobalt(II) complexes featuring a very large magnetic anisotropy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh magnetic anisotropy is a key property of paramagnetic shift tags, which are mostly studied by NMR spectroscopy, and of single molecule magnets, for which magnetometry is usually used. We successfully employed both these methods in analyzing magnetic properties of a series of transition metal complexes, the so-called clathrochelates. A cobalt complex was found to be both a promising paramagnetic shift tag and a single molecule magnet because of it having large axial magnetic susceptibility tensor anisotropy at room temperature (22.
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