Magnetic Relaxation in Iron Chains of Phthalocyanine Thin Films

ORAL

Abstract

Self-assembled iron chains are formed in metallo-organic thin films based on the small iron phthalocyanine molecule. The chains are grown parallel to the substrate and the mean chain length is controlled via deposition parameters from 30 -- 300 nm. The strong intra-chain coupling with weak inter-chain coupling leads to ferromagnetic behavior below the critical temperature. After application of a magnetic saturation field, the remanent magnetic moment is not stable when measured over time scales of 10$^{\mathrm{4}}$ s. The magnetic relaxation can be fit to a stretched exponential function, which yields the mean relaxation time and a stretch exponent. The temperature-dependent peak of the relaxation time occurs at lower temperatures for shorter iron chains that also have smaller coercivities. This means that by templating iron phthalocyanine thin films both magneto-crystalline anisotropy and inter-grain interactions can be selected.

*Supported by National Science Foundation grant NSF-DMR 0847552.

Authors

  • Thomas Gredig

    • California State University Long Beach
  • Daniel Javier

    • California State University Long Beach
  • Mathew Werber

    • California State University Long Beach
  • Matthew Byrne

    • California State University Long Beach