posted on 2018-06-12, 00:00authored byYu-Xia Wang, Yinina Ma, Yisheng Chai, Wei Shi, Young Sun, Peng Cheng
Materials that possess
coupled magnetic and electric properties
are of significant interest because of their potential use in next-generation
magnetoelectric devices such as digital information storage. To date,
the magnetoelectric materials that have been studied in-depth have
been limited mainly to inorganic oxides such as perovskite oxides.
Molecular materials are a promising alternative because their magnetic
and electric elements can be combined together at the molecular level
via relatively simple molecular designs. Here, we report the coupling
of magnetic and electric properties through a magnetodielectric (MD)
effect in a single-crystal sample, which is constructed from dysprosium(III)
single-molecule magnets (SMMs). The MD effect originates from intrinsic
spin–lattice coupling of the dysprosium(III) ion within the
sample. This is the first observation of the MD effect in a SMM-based
material, which could pave the way toward the synthesis of advanced
materials that combine distinct magnetic and electric properties using
molecular chemistry for use in molecular devices with nanoscale size.