research articletext

Size and Surface Effects in the Ultrafast Dynamics of Strongly Cooperative Spin Crossover Nanoparticles

Abstract

Cooperative photoinduced switching of molecular materials at the nanoscale is still in its infancy. Strongly cooperative spin crossover nanomaterials are arguably the best prototypes of photomagnetic and volume changing materials that can be manipulated by short pulses of light. Open questions remain regarding their non equilibrium dynamics upon light excitation and the role of cooperative elastic interactions in nanoscale systems that are characterized by large surface volume ratios. Femtosecond resolved broadband spectroscopy is performed on nanorods of the strongly cooperative Fe triazole, which undergoes a reversible low spin to high spin HS phase transition amp; 8776;360 K. Supported by density functional theory and mechano elastic Monte Carlo simulations, a marked difference is observed in the photoswitching dynamics at the surface of the nanoparticles compared with the core. Surprisingly, under low excitation lt;2 conditions, there occurs a transient increase in the HS population at the surface on the picosecond time scale, while the HS population in the core decays concomitantly. These results shed light onto the importance of surface properties and dynamical size limits of nanoscale photoresponsive nanomaterials that can be used in a broad range of application

Similar works

Full text

This paper was published in HZB Repository.

Having an issue?

Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.

Licence: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess