Title: Magnetism in Chemistry
1Magnetism in Chemistry
2General concepts
- There are three principal origins for the
magnetic moment of a free atom - The spins of the electrons. Unpaired spins give a
paramagnetic contribution. - The orbital angular momentum of the electrons
about the nucleus also contributing to
paramagnetism. - The change in the orbital moment induced by an
applied magnetic field giving rise to a
diamagnetic contribution.
3- The molar magnetic susceptibility ? of a sample
can be stated as
M is the molar magnetic moment
H is the macroscopic magnetic field intensity
4- In general ? is the algebraic sum of two
contributions associated with different
phenomena - ? ?D ?P
?D is diamagnetic susceptibility ?P is
paramagnetic susceptibility
5Curie paramagnetism
Energy diagram of an S1/2 spin in an external
magnetic field along the z-axis
?E gmBH, which for g 2 corresponds to about 1
cm-1 at 10000G
6Brillouin Function
- M N S mnPn N (m½P½ m-½P-½)
- mn -msgmB, Pn Nn/N with S Nn
7Brillouin Function
8Brillouin Function
- Substituting for P we obtain the Brillouin
function
9Brillouin Functions for different S
10Curie Law
where C Ng2mB2/(4kB) is the Curie constant
Since the magnetic susceptibility is defined as ?
M/H the Curie Law results
11 ? vs. T plot 1/? T/C gives a straight line of
gradient C-1 and intercept zero ?T C gives a
straight line parallel to the X-axis at a
constant value of ?T showing the temperature
independence of the magnetic moment.
12Curie-Weiss paramagnetism
q is the Weiss constant
13Curie-Weiss paramagnetism
Plots obeying the Curie-Weiss law with a negative
Weiss constant
14Curie-Weiss paramagnetism
Plots obeying the Curie-Weiss law with a positive
Weiss constant
15Ferromagnetism
- J positive with spins parallel below Tc
16Antiferromagnetism
- J negative with spins antiparallel below TN
17Ferrimagnetism
- J negative with spins of unequal magnitude
antiparallel below critical T
18Spin Hamiltonian in Cooperative Systems
This describes the coupling between pairs of
individual spins, S, on atom i and atom j with J
being the magnitude of the coupling
19Magnetisation
- Knowing how M depends on B through the
Brillouin function and assuming that B 0 we can
plot the two sides of the equation as functions
of M/T
20Temperature dependence of M
21Ferromagnets
22Ferromagnets
23Ferromagnets
24Ferromagnets
25Domains
26Domains
27Hysteresis
28Spin Frustration
29SUPERPARAMAGNETS
- These are particles which are so small that they
define a single magnetic domain. - Usually nanoparticles with a size distribution
- It is possible to have molecular particles which
also display hysteresis effectively behaving as
a Single Molecule Magnet (SMM)
30Mn12
Orange atoms are Mn(III) with S 2, green are
Mn(IV) with S 3/2
31Mn12
32Mn12 Spin Ladder
33Hysteresis in Mn12