Benzenetriimide-Based Molecular Conductor with Antiferro- to Ferromagnetic Switching Induced by Structural Change of π-stacked Array

Chemphyschem. 2022 Oct 6;23(19):e202200322. doi: 10.1002/cphc.202200322. Epub 2022 Jul 21.

Abstract

Benzenetriimide (BTI) is a promising building block for materials chemistry due to its characteristic 3-fold symmetry and redox properties, whereas little is known about its conductive and magnetic properties. In this study, we synthesized three charge-transfer complexes based on N,N',N''-trimethylbenzenetriimide (BTI-Me). One of the complexes contains isolated dimers of BTI-Me radical anion (BTI-Me⋅- ), while the other two have the infinite π-stacked array of BTI-Me with the formal charge of -0.5. The latter two complexes did not show metallic behavior but showed semiconducting behavior probably due to the characteristic insulation in one-dimensional electron system, so-called charge ordering and dimer-Mott insulation. The magnetic susceptibility of the complex in dimer-Mott state exhibits an unusual transition from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic spin states with the hysteresis loop of 15 K derived from the structural phase transition around 130 K. These properties were also supported by DFT calculations.

Keywords: benzentriimide; molecular conductors; molecular magnetism; redox properties; π-stacking.