Synthesis, structure and magnetism of new single molecule magnets composed of MnII2MnIII2 alkoxo-carboxylate bridged clusters capped by triethanolamine ligands

Dalton Trans. 2004 Apr 7:(7):1003-11. doi: 10.1039/b312672b. Epub 2004 Mar 2.

Abstract

A family of tetranuclear mixed-valent Mn(II)(2)/Mn(III)(2) complexes of type [Mn(4)(LH(2))(2)(LH)(2)(H(2)O)(x)(RCO(2))(2)](Y)2.nS has been synthesised and structurally characterised, where LH(3) = triethanolamine (N(CH(2)CH(2)OH)(3)), (R=CH(3), x=2, Y = CH(3)CO(2)-, n=2, S = H(2)O; 1), (R=C(6)H(5), x=0, Y=C(6)H(5)CO(2)-, n=1, S = CH(3)CN; 2), (R=C(2)H(5), x=0, Y=ClO(4)(-), n=0; 3). A common structural core was deduced from X-ray crystallography and consists of a rhomboidal (planar-diamond) array with two 7-coordinate Mn(II) "wingtip (w)" centres and two 6-coordinate Mn(III) "body (b)" centres. The Mn(III) ions are bridged to the Mn(II) ions by mu3-oxygen atoms from a deprotonated alcohol "arm" of each tridentate LH(2-) ligand and by mu2-oxygen atoms from each tetradentate LH(2)(-) ligand. The four nitrogen atoms from LH(2-) and LH(2)(-) groups, together with bridging and terminal carboxylates oxygens complete the outer coordination sites around the Mn atoms. A feature of these clusters is that they are linked together in the crystal lattice by hydrogen-bonding interactions involving a non-coordinated hydroxyl arm on each LH(2-) group. Detailed DC and AC magnetic susceptibility measurements and magnetisation isotherms have been made on the three complexes and show that intra-cluster ferromagnetic coupling is occurring between the S = 2 Mn(III) and S = 5/2 Mn(II) ions to yield S = 9 ground states. The g, J(bb) and J(wb) parameters have been deduced. Inter-cluster antiferromagnetic coupling was noted in and this influences the magnetisation versus field behaviour and the temperature and magnitude of the out-of-phase AC chi"M maxima in comparison to those observed for and. An Arrhenius plot of the reciprocal temperature of the maxima in chi"M obtained at different frequencies (10 to 1500 Hz), in the range 1.75 K to 4 K, against the natural logarithm of the magnetization relaxation rate (1/tau) yielded values of the activation energies and pre-exponential factors for two of these new tetranuclear single-molecule magnets (SMMs), and. The activation energies were compared with the potential energy barrier height, U, for magnetisation direction reversal (U = DS(2)) using the axial zero-field splitting parameter, D, deduced from the DC M/H isotherm analysis for these S = 9 species. The very small separation of S = 9 and 8 levels for these clusters highlights the limitations in the determination of D values from M/H data at low temperatures.