Molecular metals normally require charge transfer between two different chemical species. We prepared crystals of [Ni(tmdt)2] (tmdt, trimethylenetetrathiafulvalenedithiolate) and carried out crystal structure analyses and resistivity measurements. The analyses and measurements revealed that these single-component molecular crystals are metallic from room temperature down to 0.6 kelvin. Ab initio molecular orbital calculations suggested that pi molecular orbitals form conduction bands. The compact molecular arrangement, intermolecular overlap integrals of the highest occupied and lowest unoccupied molecular orbitals, and tight-binding electronic band structure calculation revealed that [Ni(tmdt)2] is a three-dimensional synthetic metal composed of planar molecules.
A porous molecular crystal with guest ethanol molecules, [Mn3(HCOO)6](C2H5OH), was found to be a new type of multifunctional molecular system, which exhibits a ferroelectric transition at 165 K and a ferrimagnetic transition at 8.5 K. [Mn3(HCOO)6](C2H5OH) will give a hint to design "multiferroic" molecular materials where ferroelectric and ferromagnetic orders coexist.
Rigorous evidence of metallicity of a molecular crystal consisting of single-component neutral molecules is disclosed by observing the Fermi surface through magnetic quantum oscillations. Torque magnetometry measurements of de Haas-van Alphen oscillatory signals in a single crystal of [Ni(tmdt)2] molecules (tmdt = trimethylenetetrathiafulvalenedithiolate) were performed by using a sensitive microcantilever at low temperatures in high magnetic fields to 45 T. The observed signals for all directions of magnetic field revealed unambiguously the presence of three-dimensional Fermi surfaces for both holes and electrons. The results are consistent with electronic band structure calculations for [Ni(tmdt)2].
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