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Multimetastability, phototrapping, and thermal trapping of a metastable commensurate superstructure in a FeIIspin-crossover compound
Author(s) -
Sébastien Pillet,
ElEulmi Bendeif,
Sylvestre Bonnet,
Helena J. Shepherd,
Philippe Guionneau
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
physical review b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1538-4489
pISSN - 1098-0121
DOI - 10.1103/physrevb.86.064106
Subject(s) - metastability , superstructure , crystallography , relaxation (psychology) , materials science , population , lattice (music) , isothermal process , spin crossover , chemistry , condensed matter physics , physics , thermodynamics , psychology , social psychology , demography , sociology , acoustics , organic chemistry
International audienceThe photoinduced switching and subsequent relaxation regime at cryogenic temperatures of the two-step spin-crossover compound [Fe(bapbpy)(NCS)2] has been investigated by time-dependent photocrystallography. Upon photoexcitation from the low-spin (LS) state, a direct population of the metastable high-spin (HS) state occurs, without involving any intermediate structural state. The relaxation from the metastable HS state in isothermal conditions at 40 K proceeds in two successive steps associated with two symmetry breaking processes. The first step corresponds to the cooperative transformation to an intermediate superstructure, characterized by a long-range-ordered [HS-LS-LS] motif coupled to a commensurate displacive modulation, and concomitant with a tripling of the c axis of the unit cell (C2/c space group). The stabilization of the intermediate state is driven by strong molecule-lattice coupling. In the second stage, the intermediate state undergoes a transformation twinning triggered by lattice strain towards the LS state. The two-step relaxation is reminiscent of the two-step thermal transition of [Fe(bapbpy)(NCS)2] and evidences multimetastability in the light-induced or relaxation regime. The long-range-ordered [HS-LS-LS] superstructure has also been trapped by rapid quench cooling to very low temperature, and has been structurally characterized

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