AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how the electron configurations of a central metal ion can change based on the surrounding ligands, leading to either low spin (LS) or high spin (HS) states.
  • The research focuses on an asymmetric homobimetallic complex, utilizing advanced theories to demonstrate characteristics like negative differential resistance and perfect spin filtering at the molecular level.
  • Even when the complex is slightly stretched, it maintains a dominant HS state and 100% spin filtering efficiency, indicating promising applications in molecular spintronic devices.

Article Abstract

In the theory of ligand fields, depending on the nature and field strength of the surrounding ligands, the central metal ion may exhibit different electronic configurations, low spin (LS) or high spin (HS). Realizing stable spin polarization is one of the main challenges in the field of molecular spintronic devices because of spin switching triggered by an external stimulus. Here, an asymmetric homobimetallic complex has been investigated using the nonequilibrium Green's function and spin density functional theory. Our calculations indicate that the homobimetallic complex can achieve negative differential resistance, rectification effect, and perfect spin filtering transport on the level of an individual molecule. Strikingly, when the molecule is stretched by 0.45 Å, the HS state is still the most stable because of the weak magnetic Ni-Ni interaction. Although its conductivity decreases by 30%, the efficiency of spin filtering remains 100%. These obtained theoretical findings suggest that the homobimetallic complexes hold great potential in molecular spintronics.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b02954DOI Listing

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