Engineering on-surface spin crossover: spin-state switching in a self-assembled film of vacuum sublimable functional molecule
Kuppusamy Senthil Kumar, Micha{\l} Studniarek, Beno\^it Heinrich,, Jacek Arabski, Guy Schmerber, Martin Bowen, Samy Boukari, Eric Beaurepaire,, Jan Dreiser, Mario Ruben

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a molecular self-assembly approach to create thin, spin-switchable SCO films with programmable interactions, maintaining their spin state switching properties comparable to bulk, which is promising for molecular spintronics applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel self-assembly strategy to engineer on-surface spin crossover films with preserved switching behavior and programmable intermolecular interactions.
Findings
Thin films exhibit similar spin switching as bulk material.
Self-assembled films maintain lamellar bilayer structure.
Programmable intermolecular interactions enable controlled spin states.
Abstract
Realization of spin crossover (SCO) based applications requires studying of spin state switching characteristics of SCO complex molecules at nanostructured environments especially on-surface. Except for a very few cases, the SCO of a surface bound thin molecular film is either quenched or heavily altered due to (i) strong molecule-surface interactions and (ii) differing intermolecular interactions in films relative to the bulk. By fabricating SCO complexes on a weakly interacting surface such as highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) and copper nitride (CuN), the interfacial quenching problem has been tackled. However, engineering intermolecular interactions in thin SCO active films is rather difficult. This work proposes a molecular self-assembly strategy to fabricate thin spin switchable surface bound films with programmable intermolecular interactions. Molecular engineering of the…
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