Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Spin crossover (SCO) compounds are very attractive types of switchable materials due to their potential applications in memory devices, actuators or chemical sensors. Rational chemical tailoring of these switchable compounds is key for achieving new functionalities in synergy with the spin state change. However, the lack of precise structural information required to understand the chemical principles that control the SCO response with external stimuli may eventually hinder further development of spin switching-based applications. In this work, the functionalization with an amine group in the two-dimensional (2D) SCO compound {Fe(5-NHPym)[M(CN)]} (, 5-NHPym = 5-aminopyrimidine, M = Pt (), Pd ()) confers versatile host-guest chemistry and structural flexibility to the framework primarily driven by the generation of extensive H-bond interactions. Solvent free species reversibly adsorb small protic molecules such as water, methanol or ethanol yielding the , or ( = 0.25-0.40) solvated derivatives. Our results demonstrate that the reversible structural rearrangements accompanying these adsorption/desorption processes ( ↔ ) follow a gate-opening mechanism whose kinetics depend not only on the nature of the guest molecule and that of the host framework ( or ) but also on their reciprocal interactions. In addition, a predictable and reversible guest-induced SCO modulation has been observed and accurately correlated with the associated crystallographic transformations monitored in detail by single crystal X-ray diffraction.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8162911PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sc04246cDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

reversible guest-induced
8
spin crossover
8
guest-induced gate-opening
4
gate-opening multiplex
4
spin
4
multiplex spin
4
crossover responses
4
responses two-dimensional
4
two-dimensional hofmann
4
hofmann clathrates
4

Similar Publications

A spin-intercalated layered metal-organic framework (MOF) magnetic system, [MCp*][{Ru(2,3,5-FArCO)}(TCNQ)]·solv (M = Co, Fe; [MCp*] = decamethylmetallocenium; 2,3,5-FArCO = 2,3,5-trifluorobenzoate; solv = crystallization solvent) is reported, which enables reversible magnetic phase switching by controlling spin frustration. In this system, paramagnetic spins ([FeCp*] with S = 1/2) are intercalated into a strongly correlated layered antiferromagnet, leading to competition between the interlayer antiferromagnetic coupling (J < 0) and another coupling between the host and intercalated spins (J). The balance between these interactions governs the emergence and nature of spin frustration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Higher-Order Cu-Based Cages via Subcomponent Self-Assembly.

Acc Chem Res

April 2025

Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1EW, United Kingdom.

ConspectusCoordination cages formed via subcomponent self-assembly have found applications in fields including separation, sensing, catalysis, and the stabilization of reactive species, due to their guest binding abilities. Subcomponent self-assembly, which combines dynamic covalent bond (C═N) formation and reversible metal coordination (N→Metal), has enabled the preparation of many intricate polyhedral structures with minimal synthetic effort. This method has been used to prepare multitopic pyridyl-imine ligands that form the edges or faces of polyhedra, with octahedral metal ions, including Fe, Co, and Zn, defining the vertices.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are an interesting class of inorganic/organic hybrid materials with a wide scope of applications. Although manganese is an abundant metal, the synthesis of Mn(III)-containing MOFs has not been widely studied due to the relative redox sensitivity of this species. We therefore investigated the self-oxidation of manganese(II) nitrate in the presence of aromatic dicarboxylic linkers in alcohols, discovering a series of new Mn(III)-MOFs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Soft porous crystals, recognized as the third generation of smart porous materials, can undergo structural deformations in response to external stimuli, such as temperature, pressure, and guest molecules. Currently, the dynamic phase transformations of soft porous crystals are predominantly determined through quantitative modeling based on gas adsorption and powder X-ray diffraction. Herein, we investigate the single-crystal-to-single-crystal structural transformation of covalent organic soft porous crystal modeled on COF-300 and identified nine distinct conformational isomers induced by different guest molecules at room and high temperatures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Within the material family of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) the subclass of flexible MOFs (flexMOFs) has attracted great attention, showing structural flexibility as a response to external stimuli such as guest adsorption, temperature, and pressure. Hybrid composites like nanoparticle (NP) loaded flexible MOFs, which stand to potentially combine advantageous properties of both are yet largely unexplored. Here the synthesis of flexMOFs with surface mounted nanoparticles, e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF