AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers investigated the crystal structure of the molecular metal [Au(tmdt)(2)] using powder X-ray diffraction across a range of temperatures (9-300 K) and observed structural changes linked to an antiferromagnetic transition occurring at 110 K.
  • The findings indicated that the transition is second-order, evidenced by shifts in unit cell volume and thermal expansion coefficient around the transition temperature, with significant changes in molecular packing occurring specifically in the (021) plane.
  • While a decrease in intermolecular distance and changes in bond lengths were noted at the transition temperature, no notable resistance anomalies were found in single-crystal resistance tests, suggesting that the electronic effect related to the antiferromagnetic transition is very subtle.

Article Abstract

The crystal structure of the single-component molecular metal [Au(tmdt)(2)] was examined by performing powder X-ray diffraction experiments in the temperature range of 9-300 K using a synchrotron radiation source installed at SPring-8. The structural anomalies associated with antiferromagnetic transition were observed around the transition temperature (T(N) = 110 K). The continuous temperature dependence of the unit cell volume and the discontinuous change in the thermal expansion coefficient at T(N) suggested that the antiferromagnetic transition of [Au(tmdt)(2)] is a second-order transition. Au(tmdt)(2) molecules are closely packed in the (021) plane with two-dimensional lattice vectors of a and l (= 2a + b + 2c). The shortest intermolecular S...S distance along the a axis shows a sharp decrease at around T(N), while the temperature dependence of l exhibits a characteristic peak in the same temperature region. A distinct structure anomaly was not observed along the direction perpendicular to the (021) plane. These results suggest that the molecular arrangement in only the (021) plane changes significantly at T(N). Thus, the intermolecular spacing shows anomalous temperature dependence at around T(N) only along that direction where the neighboring tmdt ligands have opposite spins in the antiferromagnetic spin structure model recently derived from ab initio band structure calculations. The results of single-crystal four-probe resistance measurements on extremely small crystals (approximately 25 microm) did not show a distinct resistance anomaly at T(N). The resistance anomaly associated with antiferromagnetic transition, if at all present, is very small. The Au-S bond length decreases sharply at around 110 K; this is consistent with the proposed antiferromagnetic spin distribution model, where the left and right ligands of the same molecule possess opposite spin polarizations. The tendency of the Au-S bond to elongate with decreasing temperature is ascribed to the small energy gap between the pd sigma(-) (or SOMO + 1) and the asym-Lpi(d) (or SOMO) states of the Au(tmdt)(2) molecule.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ic901172uDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

antiferromagnetic transition
16
associated antiferromagnetic
12
temperature dependence
12
021 plane
12
structural anomalies
8
anomalies associated
8
single-component molecular
8
molecular metal
8
metal [autmdt2]
8
antiferromagnetic spin
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!