posted on 2005-04-06, 00:00authored byEugenio Coronado, Mari Carmen Giménez-López, Georgiy Levchenko, Francisco M. Romero, Valentín García-Baonza, Alla Milner, Moshe Paz-Pasternak
A pressure-induced linkage isomerization of the cyanide anion has been observed in single crystals of a chromium(III)−iron(II) Prussian blue analogue of formula K0.4Fe4[Cr(CN)6]2.8□1.2·16H2O (1). Upon application of pressure in the 0−1200 MPa range, the cyanide ligand rotates and becomes C-bonded to the iron(II) cations, leading to a stabilization of their diamagnetic low-spin states. The result is a decrease of magnetization and magnetic ordering temperatures from TC = 19 K at ambient pressure to 13 K at 1200 MPa. The initial magnetic properties can be restored on pressure release. The reversible movement of cyanide in the solid state can be exploited as a switch of the magnetic interaction at the molecular level.