Prediction of huge magnetic anisotropies of transition-metal dimer-benzene complexes
Ruijuan Xiao, Daniel Fritsch, Michael D. Kuz'min, Klaus Koepernik,, Manuel Richter, Knut Vietze, Gotthard Seifert

TL;DR
This study uses density functional theory to investigate the structure and magnetic properties, especially magnetic anisotropy energy, of transition-metal dimer-benzene complexes, revealing potential for high-density magnetic recording applications.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic DFT analysis of magnetic anisotropy in TM2Bz complexes, identifying Co2Bz as a stable molecule with exceptionally large MAE.
Findings
Co2Bz has a stable structure with high magnetic anisotropy energy.
Ru2Bz shows potential for strong-MAE applications but is less stable.
The large MAE in Co2Bz is preserved from the free dimer, indicating potential for data storage.
Abstract
Based on numerically accurate density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we systematically investigate the ground-state structure and the spin and orbital magnetism including the magnetic anisotropy energy (MAE) of 3d- and 4d-transition-metal dimer benzene complexes (TM2Bz, TM = Fe, Co, Ni, Ru, Rh, Pd; Bz = C6H6). These systems are chosen to model TM-dimer adsorption on graphene or on graphite. We find that Fe2, Co2, Ni2, and Ru2 prefer the upright adsorption mode above the center of the benzene molecule, while Rh2 and Pd2 are adsorbed parallel to the benzene plane. The ground state of Co2Bz (with a dimer adsorption energy of about 1 eV) is well separated from other possible structures and spin states. In conjunction with similar results obtained by ab initio quantum chemical calculations, this implies that a stable Co2Bz complex with C6v symmetry is likely to exist. Chemical bonding…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic properties of thin films · Magnetism in coordination complexes · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies
