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Thermal spin-crossover and temperature-dependent zero-field splitting in magnetic nanographene chains

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Viñas Boström,  E.
Nano-Bio Spectroscopy Group, Departamento de Física de Materiales, Universidad del País Vasco;
Theory Group, Theory Department, Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Society;

/persons/resource/persons22028

Rubio,  A.
Nano-Bio Spectroscopy Group, Departamento de Física de Materiales, Universidad del País Vasco;
Theory Group, Theory Department, Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Society;

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2407.20996.pdf
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Citation

Wang, Y., Paz, A. P., Viñas Boström, E., Zhang, X., Li, J., Berger, R., et al. (2024). Thermal spin-crossover and temperature-dependent zero-field splitting in magnetic nanographene chains.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000F-A460-B
Abstract
Nanographene-based magnetism at interfaces offers an avenue to designer quantum materials towards novel phases of matter and atomic-scale applications. Key to spintronics applications at the nanoscale is bistable spin-crossover which however remains to be demonstrated in nanographenes. Here we show that antiaromatic 1,4-disubstituted pyrazine-embedded nanographene derivatives, which promote magnetism through oxidation to a non-aromatic radical are prototypical models for the study of carbon-based thermal spin-crossover. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy studies reveal symmetric spin excitation signals which evolve at Tc to a zero-energy peak, and are assigned to the transition of a S = 3/2 high-spin to a S = 1/2 low-spin state by density functional theory. At temperatures below and close to the spin-crossover Tc, the high-spin S= 3/2 excitations evidence pronouncedly different temperature-dependent excitation energies corresponding to a zero-field splitting in the Hubbard-Kanamori Hamiltonian. The discovery of thermal spin crossover and temperature-dependent zero-field splitting in carbon nanomaterials promises to accelerate quantum information, spintronics and thermometry at the atomic scale.