Abstract
Abstract Fundamental aspects of spin crossover (SCO) mechanisms are reviewed through considerations of ligand/crystal field theory, thermodynamics, and modeling of the thermoinduced spin transition in the solid state based on macroscopic–mesoscopic approaches . In particular, we highlight success of thermodynamic models in the simulation of first-order spin transitions with hysteretic behaviors (bistability) and multistep conversions. Bistability properties originate from elastic interactions, the so-called cooperativity between SCO molecules in the crystal packing. Although physical and chemical properties and thermodynamical quantities of noninteracting SCO compounds can be readily injected in macroscopic models, taking cooperativity into account remains problematic. The relationship between phenomenological numerical parameters and experimentally accessible quantities can only be most of the time indirectly established. Recent extensions of these thermodynamical models to grasp SCO properties at the nanoscale and combinations with ab initio numerical methods show that macroscopic models still constitute useful theoretical tools to investigate SCO phenomena. The necessity to further probe the thermomechanical properties of SCO materials is also emphasized.
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