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      [MnIII6O3Ln2] Single-Molecule Magnets: Increasing the Energy Barrier Above 100 K

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          Lanthanide double-decker complexes functioning as magnets at the single-molecular level.

          Double-decker phthalocyanine complexes with Tb3+ or Dy3+ showed slow magnetization relaxation as a single-molecular property. The temperature ranges in which the behavior was observed were far higher than that of the transition-metal-cluster single-molecule magnets (SMMs). The significant temperature rise results from a mechanism in the relaxation process different from that in the transition-metal-cluster SMMs. The effective energy barrier for reversal of the magnetic moment is determined by the ligand field around a lanthanide ion, which gives the lowest degenerate substate a large |Jz| value and large energy separations from the rest of the substates in the ground-state multiplets.
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            Is Open Access

            Quantum Computing in Molecular Magnets

            , (2009)
            Shor and Grover demonstrated that a quantum computer can outperform any classical computer in factoring numbers and in searching a database by exploiting the parallelism of quantum mechanics. Whereas Shor's algorithm requires both superposition and entanglement of a many-particle system, the superposition of single-particle quantum states is sufficient for Grover's algorithm. Recently, the latter has been successfully implemented using Rydberg atoms. Here we propose an implementation of Grover's algorithm that uses molecular magnets, which are solid-state systems with a large spin; their spin eigenstates make them natural candidates for single-particle systems. We show theoretically that molecular magnets can be used to build dense and efficient memory devices based on the Grover algorithm. In particular, one single crystal can serve as a storage unit of a dynamic random access memory device. Fast electron spin resonance pulses can be used to decode and read out stored numbers of up to 10^5, with access times as short as 10^{-10} seconds. We show that our proposal should be feasible using the molecular magnets Fe8 and Mn12.
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              Strategies towards single molecule magnets based on lanthanide ions

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Chemistry - A European Journal
                Chem. Eur. J.
                Wiley
                09476539
                August 22 2011
                August 22 2011
                July 29 2011
                : 17
                : 35
                : 9605-9610
                Article
                10.1002/chem.201101807
                2dd363b8-5c7e-42c6-ab6a-f2655973e1ca
                © 2011

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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