Molecular Nanomagnetism Studies Using High-Field Electron Paramagnetic Resonance

Dr.  Stephen Hill
Department of Physics and National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL32310, United States.

Thursday, August 30th, 14h30

 

Most Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) research is performed at the X-Band frequency of 9.7 GHz (0.25 Tesla for a free electron). Specialized commercial instruments exist at K- (25 GHz), Q- (35 GHz) and W-Band (95 GHz), operating to magnetic fields up to 6 T. The EPR facilities at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (MagLab) in Florida, offer scientists from all over the world opportunities to use several home-built, high-field/high-frequency EPR instruments with continuous coverage from ~10 GHz to >1 THz [1]. Magnets are also available providing magnetic fields up to 45 T — roughly one million times the earth’s magnetic field. EPR performed at these extremes offers tremendous advantages for problems spanning diverse research fields from condensed matter physics, to chemistry, to biology. After an overview of the MagLab EPR facility, the remainder of the talk will focus on molecular nanomagnets ¾ molecules that contain either a single magnetic ion, or multiple exchange-coupled ions that possess a well-defined collective magnetic moment (or spin). These molecules are of interest in terms of their potential use as memory elements in both classical and quantum information processing devices [1,2]. Results obtained from EPR will be highlighted, emphasizing discoveries that have contributed to a shift away from the study of large clusters to simpler molecules containing highly anisotropic magnetic ions such as lanthanides [2] or transition metals with unquenched orbital moments [3-5]. In particular, certain transition metals residing in high-symmetry coordination environments can experience orbitally degenerate ground states and very strong first-order spin-orbit coupling. The resulting giant magnetic anisotropies associated with such species have been measured using very high-field (up to 35 T) EPR [3-5]. If time allows, recent work involving the application of unique pulsed high-field EPR to the study of molecular nanomagnetism will be highlighted [6].

 

References

[1]  Baker, Blundell, Domingo, Hill et al., Struct. Bond. 164, 231-292 (2015).

[2]  Shiddiq, Coronado, Hill et al., Nature 531, 348-351 (2016).

[3]  Ruamps, Mallah, Hill et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 135, 3017-3026 (2013).

[4]  Marriott, Murrie, Hill et al., Chem. Sci. 6, 6823-6828 (2015).

[5]  Suturina, Zadrozny, Hill, Schnegg, Long, Neese et al., Inorg. Chem. 56, 3102–3118 (2017).

[6]  Greer, Thomas, Hill et al., Inorg. Chem. (submitted).