Litcius/Paper detail

Double Spin with a Twist: Synthesis and Characterization of a Neutral Mixed-Valence Organic Stable Diradical

Vyacheslav V. Sentyurin, Oleg A. Levitskiy, Tatiana S. Yankova, Yuri K. Grishin, Konstantin A. Lyssenko, Alexander S. Goloveshkin, Igor V. Alabugin, Tatiana V. Magdesieva

2024Journal of the American Chemical Society12 citationsDOI

Abstract

A convenient design strategy opens access to neutral open-shell mixed-valence species via the redox transformation of charged stable precursors, i.e., the spiro-fused borate anions. We have implemented this strategy for the synthesis of the first neutral mixed-valence diradical: two neutral mixed-valence radical fragments were assembled via a twisted biphenyl bridge. The diradical is a crystalline solid obtained in almost quantitative yield by using a facile synthetic procedure. It is stable at room temperature in the triplet ground state with a very small singlet/triplet gap. This metal-free diradical can reversibly form five redox states. The diradical exhibits an intense IVCT band in the NIR region and can be assigned as a Class 2 Robin–Day MV (mixed valence) system with weakly interacting redox centers. Computations suggest that this diradical finds itself in a unique tug-of-war between two electron delocalization patterns, Kekulé and non-Kekulé, which gives rise to two geometric isomers that are close in energy but drastically different in spin distribution and polarity. Such bistable spin-systems should be intrinsically switchable and promising for the design of functional spin devices. The scope and limitations of the new redox-strategy for the neutral MV radicals were also tested on other types of spiro-fused borates, revealing structural factors responsible for the evolution from transient to persistent and then to stable radicals.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryDiradicalValence (chemistry)TwistSpin (aerodynamics)Characterization (materials science)Chemical physicsComputational chemistryNanotechnologyOrganic chemistryAtomic physicsThermodynamicsGeometryExcited statePhysicsMathematicsMaterials scienceSinglet stateMolecular Junctions and NanostructuresMagnetism in coordination complexesQuantum optics and atomic interactions