The High-Temperature Soft Ferromagnetic Molecular Materials Based on [W(CN)6(bpy)]2-/- System

Molecules. 2022 Jul 15;27(14):4525. doi: 10.3390/molecules27144525.

Abstract

The synthesis of molecular materials with magnetic properties, in particular ferromagnetic properties, has been the subject of interest in coordination chemistry for decades. In the last three decades, research has accelerated, as it has emerged that creating bridging systems based on cyanido ligands is a good and relatively simple way to create complex polymer structures exhibiting magnetic properties. Based on many years of personal experience in the field of the synthesis of polycyanido systems, supported by comprehensive structural analysis, a simple method of transforming cyanido complexes into soft ferromagnetic materials with a Curie temperature (TC) higher than the thermal decomposition temperature, usually above 150 °C has been developed. Two soft ferromagnetic materials based on zinc and cadmium hexacyanido salts in the system with [W(CN)6(bpy)]2-/- anions are presented. The crystal structures (X-ray single crystal as well as XRD) of the precursors and the properties of the ferromagnetic materials are discussed. Most importantly, a patented method of synthesizing this type of material, based on which we obtain more than 80 soft, high-temperature ferromagnetic compounds, which proves the wide spectrum of this method, is also presented.

Keywords: cyanides; ferromagnetic; structure; tungsten.

Grants and funding

The research published in this publication was financed as part of the Innovation Incubator 4.0 project funded by the European Funds and the authors would like to thank CTT CITTRU JU for their contribution to the project. The research was partially carried out with the equipment purchased thanks to the financial support of the European Regional Development Fund in the framework of the Polish Innovation Economy Operational Program (contract no. POIG.02.01.00-12-023/08)–Dc magnetic measurements. The open-access publication of this article was funded under the program “Excellence Initiative-Research University” at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków.