Press release

 

Taming molecules to prepare the materials of the future

Paris, March 7, 2002

 

Technologies based on magnetism and conductivity are being applied to preparing non-metallic materials that, in the coming years, could offer the transparency, the mechanical properties, and the lightness of organic polymers. How can such materials be developed? Two CNRS teams(1) led by Guy Bertrand(2) have found a solution by successfully stabilizing diradicals— chemical entities which, through replication, make it possible to obtain materials offering the desired magnetic and conductive properties. These findings are published in the March 8, 2002 issue of Science.

The applications of magnetism, from the compass to electromagnets, dynamos, and transformers, have played an essential role in modern technology. Today, they are to be found in fields as varied as audio and video data storage, medical imaging, and the detection of antipersonnel mines; a luxury automobile has no less than 300 instruments that use magnetism.

The materials currently used for their magnetic properties are based on metallic derivatives. Such materials are, in general, very rigid and difficult to work with. In addition, these high-density materials are not transparent. The alternative would be to prepare non-metallic magnets offering the mechanical properties and the lightness of organic polymers such as polystyrene and PVC.

In considering possible solutions, it is important to keep in mind that matter is made up of atoms bonded together by means of their electrons. When an electron is not used to form a bond, it is said to be a "lone" electron and the atom is said to be a "radical." The magnetic behavior of a substance is due to the presence of a multitude of such radicals, commonly found in metals, although this phenomenon is not exclusive to metals.

Several research teams around the world have shown that polymers containing lone electrons located on carbon atoms offer advantageous magnetic properties. The instability of these chemical entities represents the main obstacle to the development of practical applications. It is now well established that 1,3-radicals (two atoms each carrying a lone electron, separated only by one other atom) represent the simplest models from which scientists can hope to build, by replication, materials with the properties they seek. However, the resulting materials are even more unstable than the radicals. Up to now, the most stable of them had a life span of a few microseconds at room temperature, and the use of derived materials could be contemplated only at temperatures below -250°C.

The work of the CNRS researchers led by Guy Bertrand concerns the preparation of a diradical that is potentially replicable and stable, not only at room temperature, but also in the solid state or in solution at temperatures of up to 200°C. The researchers have obtained these findings by using the very unusual properties of phosphorus and boron atoms, elements that do not belong to the metals family.

From a general standpoint, stabilizing highly reactive entities opens up numerous prospects. Species whose observation generally requires highly sophisticated handling conditions and analysis techniques become mere “ordinary components” that chemists can prepare and handle under practically any laboratory conditions they choose. This work thus opens up possibilities both for basic research (new modes of chemical bonding may be discovered, for example), and for applied research, since such components can be used under conditions and within a temperature range that is compatible with practical applications.

Reference:
Singlet Diradicals : from transition states to crystalline compounds - Science, 8 mars 2002.

(1) UMR2282 UCR - CNRS Joint Research Chemistry Laboratory, an international laboratory set up by the CNRS and the University of California, Riverside, and directed by Guy Bertrand.
UMR5069 "Hétérochimie fondamentale et appliquée" (Basic and applied heterochemistry), CNRS/UniversitŽ Paul Sabatier de Toulouse, a laboratory directed by Guy Bertrand.
(2)Guy Bertrand is a CNRS research director and a Professor at the University of California.


Researcher contact:
Dr. Guy Bertrand
UCR-CNRS Joint Research Chemistry Laboratory (UMR 2282)
Department of Chemistry
University of California - Riverside, CA 92521-0403
Tel: +1 (909) 787-2719
Fax: +1 (909) 787-4713
E-mail: gbertran@mail.ucr.edu

CNRS Chemical Sciences Department Contact:
Laurence Mordenti
Tel: +33 1 44 96 41 09
E-mail: laurence.mordenti@cnrs-dir.fr

Press contact:

Stéphanie Bia
Tel: +33 1 44 96 43 09
E-mail: stephanie.bia@cnrs-dir.fr