4.8 Article

Ni-Centered Coordination-Induced Spin-State Switching Triggered by Electrical Stimulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 39, Pages 17955-17965

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c07196

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ecole Doctorale de Chimie de Lyon
  2. Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon
  3. GDR CNRS 2067 Macrocycles Pyrroliques
  4. Region Auvergne-RhoneAlpes
  5. ANR [ANR-12-BS07-0014-01]
  6. IDEX 2020 International Joint Research Chairs [IDEX/INT/2020/19 OPE-2020-0088]

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We report the synthesis and magnetic properties of a Ni(II)-porphyrin tethered to an imidazole ligand through a flexible electron-responsive mechanical hinge. The reversible folding motion of the hinge, triggered by electrical stimulation, forces the coordination of the imidazole ligand onto the Ni(II) center, resulting in a spin state change. This spin state switching, driven by pi-dimerization between viologen cation radicals, is supported by NMR, (spectro)electrochemical, and magnetic data as well as quantum calculations.
We herein report the synthesis and magnetic properties of a Ni(II)-porphyrin tethered to an imidazole ligand through a flexible electron-responsive mechanical hinge. The latter is capable of undergoing a large amplitude and fully reversible folding motion under the effect of electrical stimulation. This redox-triggered movement is exploited to force the axial coordination of the appended imidazole ligand onto the square-planar Ni(II) center, resulting in a change in its spin state from low spin (S = 0) to high spin (S = 1) proceeding with an 80% switching efficiency. The driving force of this reversible folding motion is the pi -dimerization between two electrogenerated viologen cation radicals. The folding motion and the associated spin state switching are demonstrated on the grounds of NMR, (spectro)electrochemical, and magnetic data supported by quantum calculations.

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