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1.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 1751, 2020 Apr 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32273510

ABSTRACT

Phonons are the main source of relaxation in molecular nanomagnets, and different mechanisms have been proposed in order to explain the wealth of experimental findings. However, very limited experimental investigations on phonons in these systems have been performed so far, yielding no information about their dispersions. Here we exploit state-of-the-art single-crystal inelastic neutron scattering to directly measure for the first time phonon dispersions in a prototypical molecular qubit. Both acoustic and optical branches are detected in crystals of [VO(acac)[Formula: see text]] along different directions in the reciprocal space. Using energies and polarisation vectors calculated with state-of-the-art Density Functional Theory, we reproduce important qualitative features of [VO(acac)[Formula: see text]] phonon modes, such as the presence of low-lying optical branches. Moreover, we evidence phonon anti-crossings involving acoustic and optical branches, yielding significant transfers of the spin-phonon coupling strength between the different modes.

2.
Dalton Trans ; 45(42): 16635-16643, 2016 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27484897

ABSTRACT

Vanadium(iv) complexes have recently shown record quantum spin coherence times that in several circumstances are limited by spin-lattice relaxation. The role of the environment and vibronic properties in the low temperature dynamics is here investigated by a comparative study of the magnetization dynamics as a function of crystallite size and the steric hindrance of the ß-diketonate ligands in VO(acac)2 (1), VO(dpm)2 (2) and VO(dbm)2 (3) evaporable complexes (acac- = acetylacetonate, dpm- = dipivaloylmethanate, and dbm- = dibenzoylmethanate). A pronounced crystallite size dependence of the relaxation time is observed at unusually high temperatures (up to 40 K), which is associated with a giant spin-phonon bottleneck effect. We model this behaviour by an ad hoc force field approach derived from density functional theory calculations, which evidences a correlation of the intensity of the phenomenon with ligand dimensions and the unit cell size.

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