28 August 2022 to 2 September 2022
Science and Technology Campus, University of Parma
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Spin dynamics of V-based molecular magnets with integer spin values

O-13
30 Aug 2022, 09:40
20m
Science and Technology Campus, University of Parma

Science and Technology Campus, University of Parma

University of Parma, Italy
Oral Molecular chemistry and chemical physics Oral contributions

Speaker

Prof. Alessandro Lascialfari (Department of Physics, Università degli studi di Pavia, INFN and INSTM, Pavia, Italy)

Description

In the present work, we investigate the spin dynamics of one-dimensional spin-integer molecular nanomagnets ((CH$_3$)$_2$NH$_2$)V$_7$MF$_8$(O$_2$CtBu)$_ {162}$C$_7$H$_8$, with M=Ni/Mn, in short V$_7$M [1,2,3], by means of magnetization, susceptibility and MuSR measurements. These heterometallic nanomagnets contain seven vanadium ions (s=1) and one Ni$^{2+}$ (s=1) or Mn$^{2+}$ (s=5/2) ion, arranged in the form of regular rings. The theoretical studies of rings with a finite number of integer spins indicate a gapped ground state and a significant deviation from the Landé rule, valid for semi-integer spins [4,5]. On the other hand, the infinite spin-integer chain exhibits a topological Haldane gap between the ground state and the first excited state [6]. As confirmed by experimental data, the ground state of V$_7$Ni and V$_7$Mn is expected to be antiferromagnetic, similarly to the molecular nanomagnet V$_7$Zn [1,2,7], and the exchange coupling constants among the nearest neighbour magnetic ions are estimated to be of the order of a few Kelvin degrees. Susceptibility and magnetization measurements at low temperatures display anisotropy effects when an external magnetic field is applied. The muon longitudinal relaxation rate $\lambda$ vs temperature, at magnetic fields $\mu_0 H \geq$ 500 G, in the range $1.5\leq T\leq 100 K$, follows a heuristic Bloembergen-Purcell-Pound model [8]. No effect related to a topological gap is evinced.

References
[1] F. Adelnia, PhD thesis in Physics, Università degli studi di Pavia (2016).
[2] F. Adelnia et al., Applied Magnetic Resonance 51, 1277 (2020).
[3] I. Villa, BD thesis in Physics, Università degli studi di Milano (2018).
[4] J. Schnack et al., Phys. Rev. B 63, 014418 (2020).
[5] D. Gatteschi et al., Oxford University Press (2011).
[6] F. Haldane, Phys. Letters A 93, 464 (1983).
[7] F. A. Rusnati, MD thesis in Physics, Università degli studi di Milano (2017).
[8] N. Bloembergen et al., Phys. Rev. 73, 679 (1948).

Primary authors

Dr Ilaria Villa (Department of Clinical, Surgical and Paediatric Sciences, and INFN, Università degli studi di Pavia, Pavia, Italy) Dr Federico Aimo Rusnati (Department of Physics, Università degli studi di Milano, Milano, Italy) Samuele Sanna (Dip.to di Fisica e Astronomia “A. Righi”, Università di Bologna) Dr Fatemeh Adelnia (Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee (US) and Department of Physics, Università degli studi di Pavia, INFN and INSTM, Pavia, Italy) Dr Alice Radaelli (Department of Physics, Università degli studi di Milano, Milano, Italy) Dr Manuel Mariani (Department of Physics, Università degli studi di Pavia, INFN and INSTM, Pavia, Italy) Dr Alessandro Chiesa (Department of Mathematical, Physical and Computer Sciences, Università degli studi di Parma, Parma, Italy) Dr Claudio Sangregorio (ICCOM-CNR and INSTM, Sesto F.no (FI), Italy) Prof. Richard Winpenny (School of Chemistry, Manchester University, Manchester (UK)) Prof. Grigore Timco (School of Chemistry, Manchester University, Manchester (UK)) Prof. Stefano Carretta (Department of Mathematical, Physical and Computer Sciences, Università degli studi di Parma, Parma, Italy) Prof. Ferdinando Borsa (Department of Physics, Università degli studi di Pavia, INFN and INSTM, Pavia, Italy) Prof. Alessandro Lascialfari (Department of Physics, Università degli studi di Pavia, INFN and INSTM, Pavia, Italy)

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