Magic angle effects in a trigonal Mn(III)3 cluster: deconstruction of a single-molecule magnet
Jonathan Marbey, Pei-Rung Gan, En-Che Yang, Stephen Hill

TL;DR
This study investigates how the tilting of local magnetic axes in a Mn3 cluster affects its magnetic anisotropy and quantum tunneling, revealing the dominance of higher-order interactions and providing insights into molecular magnetism.
Contribution
It demonstrates the impact of geometric tilting on magnetic anisotropy and zero-field splitting, highlighting the role of higher-order interactions in a trigonal Mn3 single-molecule magnet.
Findings
Significant tilt of local axes reduces second-order anisotropy
Higher-order interactions dominate zero-field splitting
Magnetic level diagram is compressed and mixed
Abstract
We present angle-dependent high-frequency EPR studies on a single-crystal of a trigonal Mn3 cluster with an unusual structure in which the local magnetic easy-axes of the constituent Mn(III) ions are tilted significantly away from the molecular C3 axis towards the magic-angle of 54.7 degrees, resulting in an almost complete cancelation of the 2nd-order axial magnetic anisotropy associated with the ferromagnetically coupled total spin ST = 6 ground state. This contrasts the situation in many related Mn3 single-molecule magnets (SMMs) that have been studied intensively in the past, for which the local MnIII anisotropy tensors are reasonably parallel, resulting in substantial barriers to magnetization relaxation (Ueff = 30 to 35 cm 1) and magnetization blocking below about 2.5 K. The suppression of the 2nd-order anisotropy in the present case results in a situation in which the zero-field…
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