A structural and magnetic characterization of a trinuclear chiral Mn(II) formate three-dimensional framework exhibiting a triangular arrangement is presented. Compound Na(3)[Mn(3)(HCOO)(9)] was obtained by solvothermal synthesis and crystallizes in the chiral cubic space group P2(1)3 and is well described by a Delta conformation. The structure displays triangular Mn(3) building blocks, in which the metal centers are bonded by formate ligands in a syn-anti mode (Mn-Mn 5.697(1) A). The coordination sphere of manganese(II) is completed by six oxygen atoms from six formate ligands, resulting in an octahedral geometry. Magnetic susceptibility measurements showed antiferromagnetic interactions at high temperature and a strongly field dependent magnetic behavior below 40 K. At fields higher than 1.0 kOe only the antiferromagnetic interactions can be observed. At applied fields lower than 1.0 kOe magnetic susceptibility becomes irreversible with maxima observed at 22 and 34 K. These maxima suggest a weak ferromagnetic behavior because of spin canting, allowed by the presence of the noncentrosymmetric syn-anti HCOO bridges linking the Mn sites. This non-collinear antiferromagnetism and irreversible behavior can be due to the existence of a high degree of frustration in this unique lattice composed of linked triangular arrangements of interacting magnetic centers.
The novel chain compound [Cu(Phtfac)(2)(NITpPy)](n) (where NITpPy = 4-pyridyl-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide and Phtfac = 4,4,4-trifluoro-1-phenylbutane-1,3-dione) was synthesized and characterized structurally, magnetically and by EPR. The compound contains two non equivalent Cu(II) ions, Cu1 and Cu2, located at inversion centers and bridged by a NITpPy ligand coordinating Cu1 through the pyridine donor atom, and Cu2 through a N-O group, resulting in a head-to-head chain structure. The chain exhibits an unusual spin topology with two alternating pairs of magnetic coupling constants. The magnetic behavior was modeled considering a 16-membered ring with alternating exchange couplings. The best fit parameters indicate a ferromagnetic (J(1) = 29.4 cm(-1)), and antiferromagnetic (J(2) = -4.6 cm(-1)) couplings and an average g = 2.05, corresponding to a ground state with three parallel and one anti-parallel spin for each Cu(2)NITpPy(2) unit. DFT calculations allowed assigning the ferromagnetic coupling to Cu-O-NITpPy and the antiferromagnetic coupling to Cu-N(Py)-NITpPy. Single crystal EPR spectra display only one resonance for most field orientations, as a consequence of the collapse of the signals of the different spins produced by the exchange interactions. The observed g-tensor of this resonance is related to those expected for the Cu(II) and radical ions. Comparison of this compound with other Cu-NIT radicals chains bearing different substituents in the organic radicals, highlights that the beta-diketonate ligand plays an important role in determining the final architecture. Moreover, we show how a knowledge of the spin density distribution in the initial building blocks is essential to rationalize the magnetic behavior of the resulting product.
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