4.8 Article

Chemical Design and Magnetic Ordering in Thin Layers of 2D Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs)

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 143, Issue 44, Pages 18502-18510

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c07802

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EU (ERC) [MOL2D 788222]
  2. ERC Consolidator Grant [S-CAGE 724681, FET-OPEN SINFONIA 964396]
  3. Spanish MICINN [PID2020-117177GB-I00, PID2020-117152RB-I00]
  4. FEDER, and Unit of Excellence Maria de Maeztu [CEX2019-000919-M]
  5. Generalitat Valenciana [iDiFEDER/2018/061, iDiFEDER/2020/063]
  6. Universitat de Vale`ncia for an Atraccio de Talent fellowship
  7. European Union [881603]

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By rational chemical design, stable 2D magnetic materials based on molecules can be prepared at ambient conditions thanks to the hybrid nature of metal-organic frameworks. The versatility of this approach is illustrated by tuning the magnetic properties in a family of layered MOFs through changing metallic nodes and ligands.
Through rational chemical design, and thanks to the hybrid nature of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), it is possible to prepare molecule-based 2D magnetic materials stable at ambient conditions. Here, we illustrate the versatility of this approach by changing both the metallic nodes and the ligands in a family of layered MOFs that allows the tuning of their magnetic properties. Specifically, the reaction of benzimidazole-type ligands with different metal centers (M-II = Fe, Co, Mn, Zn) in a solvent-free synthesis produces a family of crystalline materials, denoted as MUV-1(M), which order antiferromagnetically with critical temperatures that depend on M. Furthermore, the incorporation of additional substituents in the ligand results in a novel system, denoted as MUV-8, formed by covalently bound magnetic double layers interconnected by van der Waals interactions, a topology that is very rare in the field of 2D materials and unprecedented for 2D magnets. These layered materials are robust enough to be mechanically exfoliated down to a few layers with large lateral dimensions. Finally, the robustness and crystallinity of these layered MOFs allow the fabrication of nanomechanical resonators that can be used to detect-through laser interferometry-the magnetic order in thin layers of these 2D molecule-based antiferromagnets.

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