Effect of a bromo-substituent on the magnetization dynamics of dysprosium coordination polymers constructed using a hybrid-ligand concept
Abstract
Two novel two-dimensional dysprosium coordination polymers, {[DyL(bpeedo)(ClO4)]ClO4·CH3OH}n (1) and {[DyL′(bpeedo)1.5(CH3OH)](ClO4)2·3CH3OH}n (2), featuring slow magnetic relaxation under zero dc field, have been successfully assembled using Schiff base ligands N′-(2-hydroxybenzylidene)pyridine-N-oxide-carbohydrazide (HL) and N′-(2-hydroxy-5-bromobenzylidene)pyridine-N-oxide-carbohydrazide (HL′) with an O–N–O coordination pocket and the bridging ligand 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl-N-oxide)ethene (bpeedo). Single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis indicates that both compounds possess similar dimeric structures bridged by Schiff base ligands, with further extension via μ3- and μ2-bpeedo linkers, respectively. Notably, the introduction of a bromo-substituent onto the Schiff-base ligand can induce subtle modifications of the coordination environments around Dy3+ ions but a great change in the linkage between them, ultimately affecting their magnetic properties, as evidenced by the different energy barriers of 421(8) K and 268(10) K for complexes 1 and 2, respectively. Theoretical calculations and magneto-structural analysis reveal that the higher energy barrier of 1 stems from the Ising-type magnetic anisotropy of Dy3+ ions and the strong antiferromagnetic interaction mediated by μ3-bpeedo, which can effectively suppress the quantum tunneling of magnetization and facilitate the thermally-assisted spin flip through the second-excited state. In contrast, although the structural change induced by the bromo-substituent can slightly enhance the magnetic anisotropy of Dy3+ ions in 2, the weak antiferromagnetic coupling between them prevents the relaxation pathway through the second-excited state, resulting in its lower energy barrier and smaller coercive field.