The role of terminal ligands in the slow relaxation of magnetisation and luminescence thermometry of dinuclear NdIII complexes†
Abstract
Single-molecule magnets (SMMs) are promising candidates as components for the next generation of molecule-based electronics. As the state-of-the-art in this field is mainly focused on heavy lanthanide(III) (LnIII) ions, examples of light lanthanide-based systems, e.g., those based on NdIII, have fallen far behind. Besides the slow relaxation of magnetisation, the luminescence of multifunctional LnIII complexes can be leveraged for in situ temperature monitoring via luminescence thermometry. To help understand how both magnetic and luminescence performance can be improved through structural modifications in NdIII-based SMMs, two dinuclear NdIII complexes, [NdIII2(valdien)2(X)2] (X = acac−{1-Nd2} or NO3−{2-Nd2}), are herein reported, and we discuss opto- and magneto-structural correlations depending on the terminal ligand. The NdIII complexes display field-induced slow relaxation of magnetization, but for {2-Nd2}, QTM has a lower contribution because the longer NdIII–Oterminal distances induce a weaker equatorial crystal field component. The systems were further used to develop luminescent temperature probes featuring a maximum thermal sensitivity of 0.52% K−1 at 40 K for {2-Nd2}, confirming its multifunctional slow relaxation of magnetisation and temperature readout features.