Single-molecule magnet engineering: building-block approaches

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Standard

Single-molecule magnet engineering : building-block approaches. / Pedersen, Kasper Steen; Bendix, Jesper; Clérac, Rodolphe.

I: Chemical Communications, Bind 50, Nr. 34, 2014, s. 4396-4415.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Pedersen, KS, Bendix, J & Clérac, R 2014, 'Single-molecule magnet engineering: building-block approaches', Chemical Communications, bind 50, nr. 34, s. 4396-4415. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4cc00339j

APA

Pedersen, K. S., Bendix, J., & Clérac, R. (2014). Single-molecule magnet engineering: building-block approaches. Chemical Communications, 50(34), 4396-4415. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4cc00339j

Vancouver

Pedersen KS, Bendix J, Clérac R. Single-molecule magnet engineering: building-block approaches. Chemical Communications. 2014;50(34):4396-4415. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4cc00339j

Author

Pedersen, Kasper Steen ; Bendix, Jesper ; Clérac, Rodolphe. / Single-molecule magnet engineering : building-block approaches. I: Chemical Communications. 2014 ; Bind 50, Nr. 34. s. 4396-4415.

Bibtex

@article{75d1563144834011bc890539c9a4530a,
title = "Single-molecule magnet engineering: building-block approaches",
abstract = "Tailoring the specific magnetic properties of any material relies on the topological control of the constituent metal ion building blocks. Although this general approach does not seem to be easily applied to traditional inorganic bulk magnets, coordination chemistry offers a unique tool to delicately tune, for instance, the properties of molecules that behave as {"}magnets{"}, the so-called single-molecule magnets (SMMs). Although many interesting SMMs have been prepared by a more or less serendipitous approach, the assembly of predesigned, isolatable molecular entities into higher nuclearity complexes constitutes an elegant and fascinating strategy. This Feature article focuses on the use of building blocks or modules (both terms being used indiscriminately) to direct the structure, and therefore also the magnetic properties, of metal ion complexes exhibiting SMM behaviour. This journal is",
author = "Pedersen, {Kasper Steen} and Jesper Bendix and Rodolphe Cl{\'e}rac",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1039/c4cc00339j",
language = "English",
volume = "50",
pages = "4396--4415",
journal = "Chemical Communications",
issn = "1359-7345",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry",
number = "34",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Single-molecule magnet engineering

T2 - building-block approaches

AU - Pedersen, Kasper Steen

AU - Bendix, Jesper

AU - Clérac, Rodolphe

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Tailoring the specific magnetic properties of any material relies on the topological control of the constituent metal ion building blocks. Although this general approach does not seem to be easily applied to traditional inorganic bulk magnets, coordination chemistry offers a unique tool to delicately tune, for instance, the properties of molecules that behave as "magnets", the so-called single-molecule magnets (SMMs). Although many interesting SMMs have been prepared by a more or less serendipitous approach, the assembly of predesigned, isolatable molecular entities into higher nuclearity complexes constitutes an elegant and fascinating strategy. This Feature article focuses on the use of building blocks or modules (both terms being used indiscriminately) to direct the structure, and therefore also the magnetic properties, of metal ion complexes exhibiting SMM behaviour. This journal is

AB - Tailoring the specific magnetic properties of any material relies on the topological control of the constituent metal ion building blocks. Although this general approach does not seem to be easily applied to traditional inorganic bulk magnets, coordination chemistry offers a unique tool to delicately tune, for instance, the properties of molecules that behave as "magnets", the so-called single-molecule magnets (SMMs). Although many interesting SMMs have been prepared by a more or less serendipitous approach, the assembly of predesigned, isolatable molecular entities into higher nuclearity complexes constitutes an elegant and fascinating strategy. This Feature article focuses on the use of building blocks or modules (both terms being used indiscriminately) to direct the structure, and therefore also the magnetic properties, of metal ion complexes exhibiting SMM behaviour. This journal is

U2 - 10.1039/c4cc00339j

DO - 10.1039/c4cc00339j

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24626635

AN - SCOPUS:84897567171

VL - 50

SP - 4396

EP - 4415

JO - Chemical Communications

JF - Chemical Communications

SN - 1359-7345

IS - 34

ER -

ID: 130983234