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Rotation of fullerene molecules in the crystal lattice of fullerene/porphyrin: C60 and Sc3N@C80

2021, Hao, Yajuan, Wang, Yaofeng, Spree, Lukas, Liu, Fupin

The dynamics of molecules in the solid-state is important to understand their physicochemical properties. The temperature-dependent dynamics of Sc3N@C80 and C60 in the crystal lattice containing nickel octaethylporphyrin (NiOEP) was studied with variable temperature X-ray diffraction (VT-XRD). The results indicate that the fullerene cages (both C60 and C80) in the crystal lattice present stronger libration than the co-crystallized NiOEP in the temperature range of 100–280 K. In contrast to the fullerene cage, the Sc3N cluster shows pronounced rotation roughly perpendicular to the plane of the co-crystallized NiOEP molecule driven by temperature. The obtained temperature dependent dynamic behavior of the Sc3N cluster is different from that of Ho2LuN and Lu3N, regardless of their rather similar structure, indicating the effect of the mass and size of the metal ions.

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Using internal strain and mass to modulate Dy⋯Dy coupling and relaxation of magnetization in heterobimetallic metallofullerenes DyM2N@C80 and Dy2MN@C80 (M = Sc, Y, La, Lu)

2022, Hao, Yajuan, Velkos, Georgios, Schiemenz, Sandra, Rosenkranz, Marco, Wang, Yaofeng, Büchner, Bernd, Avdoshenko, Stanislav M., Popov, Alexey A., Liu, Fupin

Endohedral clusters inside metallofullerenes experience considerable inner strain when the size of the hosting cage is comparably small. This strain can be tuned in mixed-metal metallofullerenes by combining metals of different sizes. Here we demonstrate that the internal strain and mass can be used as variables to control Dy⋯Dy coupling and relaxation of magnetization in Dy-metallofullerenes. Mixed-metal nitride clusterfullerenes DyxY3−xN@Ih-C80 (x = 0-3) and Dy2LaN@Ih-C80 combining Dy with diamagnetic rare-earth elements, Y and La, were synthesized and characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, SQUID magnetometry, ab initio calculations, and spectroscopic techniques. DyxY3−xN clusters showed a planar structure, but the slightly larger size of Dy3+ in comparison with that of Y3+ resulted in increased elongation of the nitrogen thermal ellipsoid, showing enhancement of the out-of-plane vibrational amplitude. When Dy was combined with larger La, the Dy2LaN cluster appeared strongly pyramidal with the distance between two nitrogen sites of 1.15(1) Å, whereas DyLa2N@C80 could not be obtained in a separable yield. Magnetic studies revealed that the relaxation of magnetization and blocking temperature of magnetization in the DyM2N@C80 series (M = Sc, Y, Lu) correlated with the mass of M, with DySc2N@C80 showing the fastest and DyLu2N@C80 the slowest relaxation. Ab initio calculations predicted very similar g-tensors for Dy3+ ground state pseudospin in all studied DyM2N@C80 molecules, suggesting that the variation in relaxation is caused by different vibrational spectra of these compounds. In the Dy2MN@C80 series (M = Sc, Y, La, Lu), the magnetic and hysteretic behavior was found to correlate with Dy⋯Dy coupling, which in turn appears to depend on the size of M3+. Across the Dy2MN@C80 series, the energy difference between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic states changes from 5.6 cm−1 in Dy2ScN@C80 to 3.0 cm−1 in Dy2LuN@C80, 1.0 cm−1 in Dy2YN@C80, and −0.8 cm−1 in Dy2LaN@C80. The coupling of Dy ions suppresses the zero-field quantum tunnelling of magnetization but opens new relaxation channels, making the relaxation rate dependent on the coupling strengths. DyY2N@C80 and Dy2YN@C80 were found to be non-luminescent, while the luminescence reported for DyY2N@C80 was caused by traces of Y3N@C80 and Y2ScN@C80