Light-induced stored information in nanoparticles
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry. 2010 n° 2, p. 282-288
Wiley-VCH Verlag
English Abstract
We investigate here the consequence on light-induced and thermally induced spin-crossover (SCO) properties with particle size reduction from the macroscopic to microscale to nanoscale domains. Three samples with distinct ...Read more >
We investigate here the consequence on light-induced and thermally induced spin-crossover (SCO) properties with particle size reduction from the macroscopic to microscale to nanoscale domains. Three samples with distinct particle sizes of the SCO coordination polymer [Fe(NCS)<sub>2</sub>(bpe)<sub>2</sub>] [bpe = 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl)ethane] have been prepared by water-in-oil reverse micelle methods. Comparison of the magnetic properties with particle size reduction of these and the original macroscale slow-grown crystals revealed that the spin transition becomes more gradual, more incomplete and concomitantly the transition temperature (<i>T</i><sub>1/2</sub>) decreases - much like what is observed in metal dilution studies. Importantly, here, in the first photoinduced magnetic studies on a nanoparticle SCO system, we see that even on the nanoscale photoconversion of the low spin species to a metastable high-spin state is possible. Furthermore, particle size reduction appears to have little effect on the temperature at which the stored photomagnetic information is erased. These results highlight that light-induced SCO properties are governed by direct metal coordination environment (i.e., on the molecular scale), whereas, thermally induced magnetic properties rely more on crystal packing and ligand field effects.Read less <
English Keywords
Spin crossover
Photomagnetism
Nanoparticles
Coordination polymers
Magnetic properties
Origin
Hal imported