Abstract
The Faraday effect is a magneto-optical (MO) phenomenon that causes the plane of linearly polarized light to rotate when passing through a medium subjected to a parallel magnetic field. Informed by the established quantum mechanical model developed by Buckingham and Stephens, we sought to identify molecules that would exhibit large MO responses. Magnetic circular dichroism studies of ferrocenium in the 1970s revealed its potential as an MO material; however, it has not been evaluated in the context of Faraday rotation and thin-film optical applications. Herein, we report near-infrared (NIR) Faraday rotation in thin films of decamethylferrocenium/poly(methyl methacrylate) composites with maximum Verdet constants of -3.45 × 104 deg T-1 m-1 at 810 nm (absorbance = 0.09) and -1.44 × 104 deg T-1 m-1 at 870 nm (absorbance = 0.01). These polymer-metallocene thin films deliver larger Verdet constants than commercially used NIR inorganic Faraday rotators and are facile and inexpensive to produce. The temperature dependence and distinct lineshape of the MO responses observed in decamethylferrocenium radical cations, decamethylmanganocene, and chromocene are in accordance with the quantum mechanical model. The observation of a strong C-term Faraday rotation in solid-state organometallic materials provides the groundwork for the development of high-performance metallocene-based Faraday rotators.
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