Direct Observation of Short-Range Structural Coherence During a Charge Transfer Induced Spin Transition in a CoFe Prussian Blue Analogue by Transmission Electron Microscopy
Author(s) -
M Itoi,
Toyoharu Jike,
Daisuke NishioHamane,
Seiichi Udagawa,
Tetsuya Tsuda,
Susumu Kuwabata,
Kamel Boukheddaden,
Matthew J. Andrus,
Daniel R. Talham
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.5b08242
Subject(s) - chemistry , high resolution transmission electron microscopy , prussian blue , transmission electron microscopy , spin transition , chemical physics , ionic bonding , phase transition , phase (matter) , electron transfer , atmospheric temperature range , condensed matter physics , crystallography , nanotechnology , electrochemistry , materials science , ion , electrode , thermodynamics , physics , organic chemistry
The local structure within the Co-Fe atomic array of the photoswitchable coordination polymer magnet, K0.3Co[Fe(CN)6]0.77·nH2O, is directly observed during charge transfer induced spin transition (CTIST), a solid-solid phase change, using high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). Along with the low-spin (LS) or thermally quenched high-spin (HS) states normally observed in CTIST solids at low temperature, slow cooling of K0.3Co[Fe(CN)6]0.77·nH2O results in an intermediate phase containing both HS and LS domains with short coherence length. By mapping individual metal-metal distances, the nanometer-scale HS domains are directly visualized within the LS array. Temperature-dependent analyses allow monitoring of HS domain coarsening along the warming branch of the CTIST, providing direct visualization of the elastic process and insight into the mechanism of phase propagation. Normally sensitive to electron beam damage, the low-temperature TEM measurements of the porous coordination polymer are enabled by using appropriate ionic liquids instead of usual conductive thin-film coatings, an approach that should find general utility in related classes of materials.
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