Ferromagnetic Ordering in Superatomic Solids
- Authors
- Lee, Chul-Ho; Liu, Lian; Bejger, Christopher; Turkiewicz, Ari; Goko, Tatsuo; Arguello, Carlos J.; Frandsen, Benjamin A.; Cheung, Sky C.; Medina, Teresa; Munsie, Timothy J. S.; D'Ortenzio, Robert; Luke, Graeme M.; Besara, Tiglet; Lalancette, Roger A.; Siegrist, Theo; Stephens, Peter W.; Crowther, Andrew C.; Brus, Louis E.; Matsuo, Yutaka; Nakamura, Eiichi; Uemura, Yasutomo J.; Kim, Philip; Nuckolls, Colin; Steigerwald, Michael L.; Roy, Xavier
- Issue Date
- 3-12월-2014
- Publisher
- AMER CHEMICAL SOC
- Citation
- JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, v.136, no.48, pp.16926 - 16931
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
- Volume
- 136
- Number
- 48
- Start Page
- 16926
- End Page
- 16931
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/96535
- DOI
- 10.1021/ja5098622
- ISSN
- 0002-7863
- Abstract
- In order to realize significant benefits from the assembly of solid-state materials from molecular cluster superatomic building blocks, several criteria must be met. Reproducible syntheses must reliably produce macroscopic amounts of pure material; the cluster-assembled solids must show properties that are more than simply averages of those of the constituent subunits; and rational changes to the chemical structures of the subunits must result in predictable changes in the collective properties of the solid. In this report we show that we can meet these requirements. Using a combination of magnetometry and muon spin relaxation measurements, we demonstrate that crystallographically defined superatomic solids assembled from molecular nickel telluride clusters and fullerenes undergo a ferromagnetic phase transition at low temperatures. Moreover, we show that when we modify the constituent superatoms, the cooperative magnetic properties change in predictable ways.
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Collections - Graduate School > KU-KIST Graduate School of Converging Science and Technology > 1. Journal Articles
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