Melanins are pigmentary macromolecules found throughout the biosphere that, in the 1970s, were discovered to conduct electricity and display bistable switching. Since then, it has been widely believed that melanins are naturally occurring amorphous organic semiconductors. Here, we report electrical conductivity, muon spin relaxation, and electron paramagnetic resonance measurements of melanin as the environmental humidity is varied. We show that hydration of melanin shifts the comproportionation equilibrium so as to dope electrons and protons into the system. This equilibrium defines the relative proportions of hydroxyquinone, semiquinone, and quinone species in the macromolecule. As such, the mechanism explains why melanin at neutral pH only conducts when "wet" and suggests that both carriers play a role in the conductivity. Understanding that melanin is an electronic-ionic hybrid conductor rather than an amorphous organic semiconductor opens exciting possibilities for bioelectronic applications such as ion-toelectron transduction given its biocompatibility.bioelectronics | electrical properties | biomacromolecules | ionic conduction T he melanins are responsible for multiple critical functions in humans such as photoprotection and free radical scavenging (1). These molecules are also found in the substantia nigra of the human brain stem where their exact biological role is unknown; however, it has been speculated that neuromelanin may be involved in neural transmission (2). Melanin phototoxicity is also implicated in deadly melanoma skin cancer (3, 4). Despite decades of intense studies across biology, chemistry, and physics, the full details of the structure and functions of the melanins are still not clearly understood. Eumelanin, the major component in human skin pigment is viewed as the archetypal "true" melanin (here we adopt the standard nomenclature in which the terms "eumelanin" and "melanin" are used interchangeably). Eumelanin is composed of aggregated oligomeric and polymeric species based upon the indolic monomers 5,6-dihydroxyindole (DHI) and 5,6-dihydroxyindole-2-carboxylic acid (DHICA) and their various redox forms (1). These monomers are randomly cross-linked to form planar sheets, stacked via aromatic π-interactions and with varying conjugation length and character (5, 6, 7). For many years, melanins were considered as extended linear homo-or heteropolymers with a conjugated backbone (8). However, this view no longer has any credence and the disordered 2D protomolecular sheet model is now widely accepted. This sheet model has quite profound implications for the treatment of melanins within a conventional polymer framework, and many of the standard methods and theories for probing structure property relationships in macromolecules are inadequate or simply do not apply.Two properties of melanin have particularly intrigued physicists and chemists for decades: (i) Melanins are electrical conductors showing photoconductivity in the solid state; and (ii) melanins are black with broad featureless opt...
Historically most materials in magnetic applications are based on inorganic materials. Recently, however, organic and molecular materials have begun to show increasing promise. Purely organic ferromagnets, based upon nitronyl nitroxide radicals, show long range magnetic order at very low temperatures in the region of 1 K, while sulfur based radicals show weak ferromagnetism at temperatures up to 36 K. It is also possible to prepare molecule based magnets in which transition metal ions are used to provide the magnetic moment, but organic groups mediate the interactions. This strategy has produced magnetic materials with a large variety of structures, including chains, layered systems and three-dimensional networks, some of which show ordering at room temperature and some of which have very high coercivity. Even if long range magnetic order is not achieved, the spin crossover effect may be observed, which has important applications. Further magnetic materials may be obtained by constructing charge transfer salts, which can produce metallic molecular magnets. Another development is single-molecule magnets, formed by preparing small magnetic clusters. These materials can show macroscopic quantum tunnelling of the magnetization and may have uses as memory devices or in quantum computation applications.
The recent observation of superconductivity with critical temperatures (T c ) up to 55 K in the pnictide RFeAsO 1−x F x , where R is a lanthanide, marks the first discovery of a noncopper-oxide-based layered high-T c superconductor 1-3 . It has raised the suspicion that these new materials share a similar pairing mechanism to the cuprate superconductors, as both families exhibit superconductivity following charge doping of a magnetic parent material. In this context, it is important to follow the evolution of the microscopic magnetic properties of the pnictides with doping and hence to determine whether magnetic correlations coexist with superconductivity. Here, we present a muon spin rotation study on SmFeAsO 1−x F x , with x = 0-0.30 that shows that, as in the cuprates, static magnetism persists well into the superconducting regime. This analogy is quite surprising as the parent compounds of the two families have rather different magnetic ground states: itinerant spin density wave for the pnictides contrasted with the MottHubbard insulator in the cuprates. Our findings therefore suggest that the proximity to magnetic order and associated soft magnetic fluctuations, rather than strong electronic correlations in the vicinity of a Mott-Hubbard transition, may be the key ingredients of high-T c superconductors.Similar to the cuprates, the pnictide high-critical-temperature (T c ) superconductors (HTSCs) have a layered structure comprising alternating FeAs and LaO sheets, with the Fe arranged on a square lattice 1 . Theoretical calculations predict a quasi-twodimensional electronic structure, with LaO layers that mainly act as blocking layers and metallic FeAs layers that are responsible for superconductivity [4][5][6] , although these are multiband superconductors with up to five FeAs-related bands crossing the Fermi level [4][5][6][7] . Like the copper-oxide HTSCs, the superconducting state in the pnictides emerges on charge doping a magnetic parent compound [8][9][10] , with indications that the maximal T c occurs just as magnetism disappears [11][12][13] . The last point may well be of great significance, as the parent compounds in the two families are very different. For the pnictides, there are strong indications that they are itinerant systems with magnetism arising from a nesting-induced spin density wave (SDW). This is in contrast to the cuprates, where it is well established that the mother compounds are 'charge transfer insulators', where strongly repulsive electronic correlations yield an insulating and antiferromagnetic ground state despite a half-filled conduction band. It is therefore of great importance to obtain further insight into the differences and similarities of the pnictide and cuprate HTSCs. A particularly important question is how magnetism and superconductivity evolve on electron doping. In this context, muon spin rotation (μSR) is an ideal technique as it provides microscopic information corresponding to the bulk of a sample and there is a substantial body of μSR data that has been colle...
Magnetotransport measurements have been carried out on the organic superconductor kappa -(BEDT-TTF)2Cu(NCS)2 at temperatures down to 500 mK and in hydrostatic pressures up to 16.3 kbar. The observation of Shubnikov-de Haas and magnetic breakdown oscillations has allowed the pressure dependences of the area of the closed pocket of the Fermi surface and the carrier effective masses to be deduced and compared with simultaneous measurements of the superconducting critical temperature Tc. The effective mass measured by the temperature dependence of the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations is found to fall rapidly with increasing pressure up to a critical pressure Pc approximately=5 kbar. Above Pc a much weaker pressure dependence is observed; Tc also falls rapidly with pressure from 10.4 K at ambient pressure to zero at around Pc. This strongly suggests that the enhanced effective mass and the superconducting behaviour are directly connected in this organic superconductor. A simplified model of the band structure of kappa -(BEDT-TTF)2Cu(NCS)2 has been used to derive the bare band masses of the electrons from optical data. Comparisons of these parameters with cyclotron resonance data and the effective masses measured in the present experiments indicate that the greater part of the enhancement of the effective mass necessary for superconductivity in this material is due to quasiparticle interactions, with the electron-phonon interactions playing a secondary role. The dependence of Tc on the effective mass may be fitted satisfactorily to a suitably parametrized weak-coupling BCS expression, although this cannot be taken as a definitive proof of the nature of superconductivity in organic conductors.
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