The magnetic properties of the spin-crossover compounds, [Fe(qsal)2]NCSe-MeOH (1) and [Fe(qsal)2]NCSe-CH2Cl2 (2), have been measured. We have discovered that both compounds 1 and 2 exhibit a wide thermal hysteresis loop of 140 K (T(1/2) upward arrow = 352 K and T(1/2) downward arrow = 212 K) and 180 K (T(1/2) upward arrow = 392 K and T(1/2) downward arrow = 212 K), respectively, in the first cycle. Thermogravimetric analysis shows that solvent molecules escape from compounds 1 and 2 around 340 and 395 K, respectively. This means that the hysteresis loops observed for the first cycle are only apparent ones. Following the first loop, they show a two-step spin-crossover in warming mode. The so-called "step 1" and "step 2" are centered around T(1/2(S1)) upward arrow = 215 K and T(1/2(S2)) upward arrow = 282 K, respectively. On the other hand, a one-step spin-crossover occurs at T(1/2) downward arrow = 212 K in cooling mode. The hysteresis widths can be estimated to be 3 K (step 1) and 70 K (step 2), assuming that the widths in steps 1 and 2 are defined as the differences between T(1/2(S1)) upward arrow and T(1/2) downward arrow, and T(1/2(S2)) upward arrow and T(1/2) downward arrow, respectively. The hysteresis width of 70 K in step 2 is one of the widest values reported so far for spin-crossover complexes. It is thought that the cooperativity operating in the complexes arises mainly from the intermolecular pi interactions between quinoline and phenyl rings. Using a previously reported model, we are able to simulate the hysteresis loop with a two-step spin-crossover in warming mode and a one-step transition in cooling mode.
Using velocity-analyzed cold neutrons we observed the production of ultracold neutrons in superfluid 4 He at 0.45 to 1.5 K. Ultracold neutrons are produced for an incident neutron wavelength of 8.78 ±0.06 A which agrees with the single-phonon emission theory. The temperature variation of the ultracold-neutron storage lifetime is also discussed.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.