Dicopper(II) Metallacyclophanes as Multifunctional Magnetic
Devices: A Joint Experimental and Computational Study
María Castellano,
†,§
Rafael Ruiz-García,
†,‡
Joan Cano,
†,‡
Jesú s Ferrando-Soria,
†,∥
Emilio Pardo,
†
Francisco R. Fortea-Pe ́ rez,
†
Salah-Eddine Stiriba,
†
Miguel Julve,
†
and Francesc Lloret*
,†
†
Institut de Cie ̀ ncia Molecular (ICMol), Universitat de Valencia, 46980 Paterna, Vale ̀ ncia, Spain
‡
Fundació General de la Universitat de Valè ncia (FGUV), 46010 Valé ncia, Spain
CONSPECTUS: Metallosupramolecular complexes constitute an important advance in the emerging fields of molecular
spintronics and quantum computation and a useful platform in the development of active components of spintronic circuits and
quantum computers for applications in information processing and storage. The external control of chemical reactivity (electro-
and photochemical) and physical properties (electronic and magnetic) in metallosupramolecular complexes is a current challenge
in supramolecular coordination chemistry, which lies at the interface of several other supramolecular disciplines, including
electro-, photo-, and magnetochemistry. The specific control of current flow or spin delocalization through a molecular assembly
in response to one or many input signals leads to the concept of developing a molecule-based spintronics that can be viewed as a
potential alternative to the classical molecule-based electronics. A great variety of factors can influence over these electronically or
magnetically coupled, metallosupramolecular complexes in a reversible manner, electronic or photonic external stimuli being the
most promising ones. The response ability of the metal centers and/or the organic bridging ligands to the application of an
electric field or light irradiation, together with the geometrical features that allow the precise positioning in space of substituent
groups, make these metal−organic systems particularly suitable to build highly integrated molecular spintronic circuits. In this
Account, we describe the chemistry and physics of dinuclear copper(II) metallacyclophanes with oxamato-containing dinucleating
ligands featuring redox- and photoactive aromatic spacers. Our recent works on dicopper(II) metallacyclophanes and earlier ones on
related organic cyclophanes are now compared in a critical manner. Special focus is placed on the ligand design as well as in the
combination of experimental and computational methods to demonstrate the multifunctionality nature of these metal-
losupramolecular complexes. This new class of oxamato-based dicopper(II) metallacyclophanes affords an excellent synthetic and
theoretical set of models for both chemical and physical fundamental studies on redox- and photo-triggered, long-distance electron
exchange phenomena, which are two major topics in molecular magnetism and molecular electronics. Apart from their use as
ground tests for the fundamental research on the relative importance of the spin delocalization and spin polarization mechanisms of
the electron exchange interaction through extended π-conjugated aromatic ligands in polymetallic complexes, oxamato-based
dicopper(II) metallacyclophanes possessing spin-containing electro- and chromophores at the metal and/or the ligand counterparts
emerge as potentially active (magnetic and electronic) molecular components to build a metal-based spintronic circuit. They are
thus unique examples of multifunctional magnetic complexes to get single-molecule spintronic devices by controlling and allowing
the spin communication, when serving as molecular magnetic couplers and wires, or by exhibiting bistable spin behavior, when
acting as molecular magnetic rectifiers and switches. Oxamato-based dicopper(II) metallacyclophanes also emerge as potential
candidates for the study of coherent electron transport through single molecules, both experimentally and theoretically. The results
presented herein, which are a first step in the metallosupramolecular approach to molecular spintronics, intend to attract the
attention of physicists and materials scientists with a large expertice in the manipulation and measurement of single-molecule
electron transport properties, as well as in the processing and addressing of molecules on different supports.
Received: October 14, 2014
Published: February 20, 2015
Article
pubs.acs.org/accounts
© 2015 American Chemical Society 510 DOI: 10.1021/ar500378s
Acc. Chem. Res. 2015, 48, 510−520