Antimony-ligated dysprosium single-molecule magnets as catalysts for stibine dehydrocoupling
Date
Authors
Pugh, Thomas
Chilton, Nicholas F.
Layfield, Richard A.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Access Statement
Abstract
The synthesis of antimony-ligated dysprosium SMMs is described in addition to the unexpected reactivity of the SMMs in stibine dehydrocoupling catalysis. Single-molecule magnets (SMMs) are coordination compounds that exhibit magnetic bistability below a characteristic blocking temperature. Research in this field continues to evolve from its fundamental foundations towards applications of SMMs in information storage and spintronic devices. Synthetic chemistry plays a crucial role in targeting the properties that could ultimately produce SMMs with technological potential. The ligands in SMMs are invariably based on non-metals; we now report a series of dysprosium SMMs (in addition to their magnetically dilute analogues embedded in yttrium matrices) that contain ligands with the metalloid element antimony as the donor atom, i.e. [(η 5 -Cp′ 2 Dy)μ-Sb(H)Mes] 3 ( 1-Dy ) and [(η 5 -Cp′ 2 Dy) 3 μ-(SbMes) 3 Sb] ( 2-Dy ), which contain the stibinide ligand [Mes(H)Sb] − and the unusual Zintl-like ligand [Sb 4 Mes 3 ] 3− respectively (Cp′ = methylcyclopentadienyl; Mes = mesityl). The zero-field anisotropy barriers in 1-Dy and 2-Dy are U eff = 345 cm −1 and 270 cm −1 respectively. Stabilization of the antimony-ligated SMMs is contingent upon careful control of reaction time and temperature. With longer reaction times and higher temperatures, the stibine pro-ligands are catalytically dehydrocoupled by the rare-earth precursor complexes. NMR spectroscopic studies of the yttrium-catalysed dehydrocoupling reactions reveal that 1-Y and 2-Y are formed during the catalytic cycle. By implication, 1-Dy and 2-Dy should also be catalytic intermediates, hence the nature of these complexes as SMMs in the solid-state and as catalysts in solution introduces a strategy whereby new molecular magnets can be identified by intercepting species formed during catalytic reactions.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Chemical Science
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Publication