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Designing High-Spin Organic Radicals for Spintronics: A Computational Exploration of Substituent and Structural Effects in Blatter Tri-Radicals

Sands, Jacob (2025) Designing High-Spin Organic Radicals for Spintronics: A Computational Exploration of Substituent and Structural Effects in Blatter Tri-Radicals. Master of Science by Research (MScRes) thesis, University of Kent,. (doi:10.22024/UniKent/01.02.110219) (KAR id:110219)

Abstract

High-spin Blatter-type tri-radicals represent a unique class of polyradicals with promising applications in materials science, electronics, and spintronics, attributed to their stability, antiferromagnetic behaviour, and π-spin delocalisation. However, broader application of these compounds has been hindered by limited understanding of how structural variations, including geometry and substituent effects, influence their electronic properties and stability, particularly the doublet-quartet (D–Q) energy gap. This thesis addresses these gaps by examining how geometry and substituent modifications affect the electronic structure, ground-state multiplicity, and excited-state topology of Blatter-type tri-radicals and additional triazine biradicals using DFT benchmarks against high-level multireference calculations. The findings demonstrate that substituents play a pivotal role: F, as an electron-withdrawing substituent, shortens bond lengths, while Cl and Br induce rotational distortions due to steric hindrance, especially in inner substituent positions. Electron-donating and electron-withdrawing groups also exhibit unique behaviours, with NH2 groups introducing deviations and hydrogen bonding, while COOH and CHO groups maintain planarity yet contribute out-of-plane distortions. Analysis of D–Q gaps reveals that inner substitutions generally reduce gaps due to steric effects, while outer substitutions tend to favour quartet ground states, irrespective of the substituent tested. Further analysis of fused dithiazole-triazine derivatives reveals that, while ring heteroatoms and functional groups influence singlet-triplet energy gaps, all these systems consistently exhibit closed-shell singlet ground states. This thesis provides deeper insights into the electronic properties of Blatter-type tri-radicals and biradical triazines, establishing key design principles for creating stable, high-performance organic polyradicals and advancing the potential of highspin systems in magnetic and spintronic devices.

Item Type: Thesis (Master of Science by Research (MScRes))
Thesis advisor: Fantuzzi, Felipe
Thesis advisor: Kinnear, Timothy
DOI/Identification number: 10.22024/UniKent/01.02.110219
Uncontrolled keywords: ACOH Acetic Acid AFM Atomic force microscopy AILFT Ab initio ligand field theory BJ Becke-Johnosn damping function BS Broken symmetry CASPT2 Complete active space second-order perturbation theory CASSCF Complete active space self-consistent field CC Coupled cluster CCDC Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre CCS Coupled cluster with single excitations CCSD Coupled cluster with single and double excitations CCSD(T) Couple cluster with singles, doubles, and perturbative triple excitations CCSDT Coupled cluster with single, double and triple excitations CI Configuration interaction CID Configuration interaction with double excitations CISD Configuration interaction with single and double excitations D-Q Doublet-quartet energy gap DCM Dichloromethane DFT Density functional theory DH Double hybrid DPLNO Domain-based local pair natural orbital EDG Electron donating group ESP Electrostatic potential map EWG Electron withdrawing group FM Ferromagnetic FMR Ferromagnetic resonance GGA Generalized gradient approximation GMR Giant magnetoresistance HF Hartree–Fock ICE Iterative configuration expansion ICF Inhomogeneity correction factor ISHE Inverse spin Hall effect KS-DFT Kohn–Sham DFT LDA Local-density approximation LSDA Local-spin density approximation LYP Lee–Yang–Parr M Magnetization MAD Mean absolute deviation META-GGA Meta-generalised gradient approximation MP Møller-Plesset MP2 Second-order Møller–Plesset perturbation theory MP3 Third-order Møller–Plesset perturbation theory MP4 Fourth-order Møller–Plesset perturbation theory MRAM Magnetic random-access memory NEVPT2 N-electron valance state second-order perturbation theory viii NIR Near infrared NM Non-magnetic ODMR Optically detected magnetic resonance OF-DFT Orbital-free DFT OFET Organic field transistors OLEDS Organic light emitting diodes OMBD Organic molecular beam deposition PBE Perdew–Burke–Ernzerhof Pn Pnictogen RAM Random-access memory RIJCOSX Resolution of the identity for Coulomb and chain of spheres for exchange RMSD Root-mean-square deviation SCRF Self-consistent reaction field SF-DFT Spin-flip DFT SMD Solvent model based on density SOMO Singly occupied molecular orbital S-T Singlet-Triplet STM Scanning tunnelling microscopy SVP Spin valance polarised TMR Tunnelling magnetoresistance TPPE Two-photon photoemission UHF Unrestricted Hartree–Fock UEG Uniform electron gas μSR Low energy muon spin rotation vdW van der Waals
Subjects: Q Science
Institutional Unit: Schools > School of Natural Sciences > Chemistry and Forensic Science
Former Institutional Unit:
There are no former institutional units.
SWORD Depositor: System Moodle
Depositing User: System Moodle
Date Deposited: 06 Jun 2025 14:31 UTC
Last Modified: 09 Jun 2025 10:00 UTC
Resource URI: https://kar.kent.ac.uk/id/eprint/110219 (The current URI for this page, for reference purposes)

University of Kent Author Information

Sands, Jacob.

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