AI Article Synopsis

  • - A new compound, SrNiOCuSe, features alternating layers of [SrNiO] and [CuSe] and shows an antiferromagnetic ordering of Ni ions below around 160 K, with a high-spin state and a localized magnetic moment.
  • - The high-spin configuration in SrNiOCuSe is supported by bond length analysis and DFT calculations, contrasting with its sulfide counterpart, SrNiOCuS, which exhibits a low-spin state and lacks magnetic moments due to its elongated ligand field.
  • - The study of solid solutions like SrNiOCu(Se,S) indicates a gradual transition from high-spin to low-spin states based on composition, while pressure application up to 7.2

Article Abstract

SrNiOCuSe, comprising alternating [SrNiO] and [CuSe] layers, is reported. Powder neutron diffraction shows that the Ni ions, which are in a highly elongated NiOSe environment with D symmetry, adopt a high-spin configuration and carry localized magnetic moments which order antiferromagnetically below ∼160 K in a √2 × √2 × 2 expansion of the nuclear cell with an ordered moment of 1.31(2) μ per Ni ion. The adoption of the high-spin configuration for this cation in a pseudo-square-planar ligand field is supported by consideration of the experimental bond lengths and the results of density functional theory (DFT) calculations. This is in contrast to the sulfide analogue SrNiOCuS, which, according to both experiment and DFT calculations, has a much more elongated ligand field, more consistent with the low-spin configuration commonly found for square-planar Ni, and accordingly, there is no evidence for magnetic moment on the Ni ions. Examination of the solid solution SrNiOCu(Se S ) shows direct evidence from the evolution of the crystal structure and the magnetic ordering for the transition from high-spin selenide-rich compounds to low-spin sulfide-rich compounds as a function of composition. Compression of SrNiOCuSe up to 7.2 GPa does not show any structural signature of a change in the spin state. Consideration of the experimental and computed Ni coordination environments and their subtle changes as a function of temperature, in addition to transitions evident in the transport properties and magnetic susceptibilities in the end members, SrNiOCuSe and SrNiOCuS, suggest that simple high-spin and low-spin models for Ni may not be entirely appropriate and point to further complexities in these compounds.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9648177PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.2c02002DOI Listing

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