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Determination of magnetic anisotropy due to spin-orbit coupling in Fe (II) spin crossover thin film

ORAL

Abstract

Spin crossover molecules such as [Fe(H2B(pz)2)2(bipy)] (pz=pyrazol−1−yl, bipy=2,2’−bipyridine) are candidates for molecular spintronics and promise ultrafast and low-power devices for data storage and magnetic sensing. Most recently, this molecule has been coupled to a ferroelectric and shown to undergo a non-volatile, isothermal, reversible spin-state transition at room temperature. The spin state transitions may also be controlled by an external magnetic field, which calls for better understanding of the transition mechanism. Recently conducted field dependent, temperature dependent, and orientation dependent X-ray magnetic circular dichroism experiments on a 60 nm [Fe(H2B(pz)2)2(bipy)] thin film deposited on a SiO2 substrate show that the orbital moment of the molecule is soft to the magnetic field, and the hard axis of the magnetic moment is along the thin film surface normal direction. These results can be interpreted within the context of a 3D Ising model Hamiltonian with a magnetic field term, where an anisotropic energy barrier is observed in the high spin state of the molecule.

Publication: Planned paper: "Direct Observation of the Magnetic Anisotropy of an Fe (II) Spin Crossover Molecular Thin Film" by A. S. Dale et al.

Presenters

  • Ashley Dale

    Indiana University - Purdue University

Authors

  • Ashley Dale

    Indiana University - Purdue University

  • Saeed Yazdani

    Indiana University - Purdue University

  • Thilini K Ekanayaka

    University of Nebraska - Lincoln

  • Esha Mishra

    University of Nebraska - Lincoln

  • Yuchen Hu

    University of Nebraska - Lincoln

  • Peter A Dowben

    University of Nebraska - Lincoln

  • John W Freeland

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • Jian Zhang

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA

  • Horia I Petrache

    Indiana University - Purdue University

  • Ruihua Cheng

    Indiana University - Purdue University, Department of Physics, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202, USA