Under the supervision of Lucie Nataf and in collaboration with Anne Bleuzen and Amélie Bordage from ICMMO (Université Paris Saclay), the post-doctoral fellow will participate in the beamline's missions:
He/she will participate in scientific conferences related to the research developed and/or the experimental and technical possibilities of the beamline. He/she will also write his/her results in scientific journal articles.
Recently, the versatile chemistry of bimetallic Prussian Blue Analogues (PBAs), and the description of their electronic structure using a 'molecular orbital' approach, have been used to better understand XMCD signals in the hard X-ray range1,3. This study has made it possible for the first time to relate XMCD signal characteristics to the electronic structure and local magnetism of transition metal ions in these molecular systems and to establish expressions that accurately reproduce the signal intensities. These advances now make it possible to use transition metal K-edge XMCD to probe locally the magnetism of ABPs. They have also suggested a relationship between the orientation of the magnetic moment relative to the crystallographic structure and the intensity of the XMCD signal. The use of XMCD to understand the local magnetic properties of ABPs on the one hand, and the use of rare-earth and transition metal coordination compounds to better understand the role of magnetic moment orientation on XMCD signals on the other, are at the heart of the two proposed axes of research.
Trimetallic ABPs are more complex than bimetallic ABPs, both in terms of the interpretation of XMCD signals and in terms of the properties exhibited by these compounds. These trimetallic compounds of chemical formulae (AxA'1-x)4[B(CN)6]3/8 and A4[(BxB'1-x)(CN)6]3/8 display original magnetic properties due to the competition between the exchange interactions of the two sublattices (A and B). A first study showing the novel contribution of XMCD at transition metal K-edge to understanding the properties of CoNiFe ((CoxNi(1-x))4[Fe(CN)6]3/84 series compounds opens up a new field of research to be explored, the number of possible transition metal combinations in these systems being infinite.
Some bimetallic and trimetallic ABPs also exhibit photo-induced switching properties. The study of local magnetic properties in such photo-induced states, almost unexplored, represents another open field of research.
Another focus will be on single crystals of rare-earth mono and polymetallic molecular complexes and single crystals of cyanide-bridged transition metal chains, in collaboration with the Laboratoire de Chimie de Coordination in Toulouse. Most of these systems exhibit a magnetic anisotropy whose orientation is known with respect to the crystallographic axes. XMCD measurements of these systems require the application of a magnetic field able to reach 7T and the orientation of single crystals.
The post-doctoral fellow will be encouraged to use other experimental techniques, either at SOLEIL (on other light lines such as AILES, PSICHE, CRISTAL, GALAXIES...) or outside the synchrotron, in particular in collaboration with nearby laboratories of Paris-Saclay.
France Government/Public Sector On-site Physics Postdoc Solid State Physics SOLEIL Synchrotron