Issue 23, 2019

Revising the common understanding of metamagnetism in the molecule-based bisdithiazolyl BDTMe compound

Abstract

The BDTMe molecule-based material is the first example of a thiazyl radical to exhibit metamagnetic behavior. Contrary to the common idea that metamagnetism occurs in low-dimensional systems, it is found that BDTMe magnetic topology consists of a complex 3D network of almost isotropic ferromagnetic spin-ladders that are coupled ferromagnetically and further connected by some weaker antiferromagnetic interactions. Calculated magnetic susceptibility χT(T) data is in agreement with experiment. Calculated M(H) data clearly show the typical sigmoidal shape of a metamagnet at temperatures below 2 K. The calculated critical field becomes more apparent in the dM/dH(H) plot, being in very good agreement with experiment. Our computational study concludes that the magnetic topology of BDTMe is preserved throughout the entire experimental range of temperatures (0–100 K). Accordingly, the ground state is the same irrespective of the temperature at which we study the BDTMe crystal. Revising the commonly accepted understanding of a metamagnet explained as ground state changing from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic, the Boltzmann population of the different states is here suggested to be the key concept: at 2 K the ground singlet state has more weight (24%) than at 10 K (1.5%), where excited states have an important role. Changes in the antiferromagnetic interactions that couple the ferromagnetic skeleton of BDTMe will directly affect the population of the distinct states that belong to a given magnetic topology and thus its magnetic response. Accordingly, this strategy could be valid for a wide range of bisdithiazolyl BDT-compounds whose magnetism can be tuned by means of weak antiferromagnetic interactions.

Graphical abstract: Revising the common understanding of metamagnetism in the molecule-based bisdithiazolyl BDTMe compound

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Jan 2019
Accepted
14 May 2019
First published
31 May 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2019,21, 12184-12191

Revising the common understanding of metamagnetism in the molecule-based bisdithiazolyl BDTMe compound

C. Climent, S. Vela, J. Jornet-Somoza and M. Deumal, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2019, 21, 12184 DOI: 10.1039/C9CP00467J

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