Abstract
Vanadium(IV) magnetic centers are prime candidates as molecular quantum units. One longstanding question is how to obtain a scaffold that connects multiple centers and allows two communication modalities: magnetic and electronic. We have synthesized and studied a selection of vanadyl porphyrin dimers, as models of the most synthetically accessible linear porphyrin arrays. We show that a strongly π-conjugated backbone places the magnetic system in the strong coupling regime and protects the quantum coherence against electron pair flip-flop processes at low temperatures (<10 K). This result is a fundamental step towards the design of molecular materials for single-molecule devices controlled by microwaves with electrical readout.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information
Description
Details of synthetic protocols, mass spectra, UV−vis–NIR spec-tra, X-ray crystallography, DFT calculations and details of magnetic characterization, EPR and SQUID.
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