Does the Sign of the Cu-Gd Magnetic Interaction Depend on the Number of Atoms in the Bridge?

Chemistry. 2016 Feb;22(6):2171-2180. doi: 10.1002/chem.201504238. Epub 2016 Jan 7.

Abstract

Several theoretical investigations with CASSCF methods confirm that the magnetic behavior of Cu-Gd complexes can only be reproduced if the 5d Gd orbitals are included in the active space. These orbitals, expected to be unoccupied, do present a low spin density, which is mainly due to a spin polarization effect. This theory is strengthened by the experimental results reported herein. We demonstrate that Cu-Gd complexes characterized by Cu-Gd interactions through single-oxygen and three-atom bridges consisting of oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen atoms, present weak ferromagnetic exchange interactions, whereas complexes with bridges made of two atoms, such as the nitrogen-oxygen oximato bridge, are subject to weak antiferromagnetic exchange interactions. Therefore, a bridge with an odd number of atoms induces a weak ferromagnetic exchange interaction, whereas a bridge with an even number of atoms supports a weak antiferromagnetic exchange interaction, as observed in pure organic compounds and also, as in this case, in metal-organic compounds with an active spin polarization effect.

Keywords: Cu-Gd complexes; coordination chemistry; magnetic properties; spin polarization; structure elucidation.