organomagneesi
Organomagneesi, or organomagnetism, is a field that studies magnetic phenomena in organic materials and in systems where organic components play a primary role in magnetic behavior. It covers metal-free organic magnets, molecular magnets built from organic radicals, conjugated polymers, and related organometallic compounds where the magnetism arises from carbon-based frameworks or from organic ligands interacting with metals. The central aim is to understand how unpaired electron spins in organic structures interact and order, and how such interactions can be tuned by chemical design.
Magnetic behavior in organomagneesi typically stems from unpaired electrons localized on stable organic radicals or delocalized
Materials of interest include radical-containing small molecules and polymers, verdazyl- and nitronyl nitroxide-based compounds, organic radical
Applications under exploration include spintronics, lightweight data storage, and magnetic sensors. Benefits of organomagneesi include chemical
See also: magnetism, organic electronics, molecular magnets, spintronics.