Abstract

The preparation and characterisation of organic molecular magnets is a non-trivial task which touches on many contemporary issues within chemistry.[...]

Highlights

  • The preparation and characterisation of organic molecular magnets is a non-trivial task which touches on many contemporary issues within chemistry

  • Amongst the more fashionable free radicals used in the design of magnetic materials are the persistent nitroxide and nitronyl nitroxide radicals, as well as verdazyl and thiazyl radicals

  • The formation of a stable radical itself does not infer any form of magnetically ordered phase

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Summary

Introduction

The preparation and characterisation of organic molecular magnets is a non-trivial task which touches on many contemporary issues within chemistry. As a number of authors have alluded to in their articles within this Special Issue, the design of organic ferromagnets merely requires ‘a stable organic radical with a three-dimensional network of ferromagnetic interactions’. A number of families of stable organic radicals have been identified which have proved to be suitable building blocks in the design of molecular materials.

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