The ligand-driven self-assembly of metal clusters offers a powerful strategy for constructing discrete molecular architectures with tunable magnetic and structural properties. By judiciously selecting appropriate multidentate ligands, researchers can direct the formation of polynuclear metal assemblies with diverse nuclearities, geometries, and topologies. Coordination-driven processes commonly stabilize such assemblies where multidentate ligands operate as templates and linkers. These will also determine how the metal centers are arranged in space and how they connect to each other. These clusters can take on shapes that range from basic bridging dimers to more complicated icosahedral and cubane-type motifs. They often have excellent symmetry and strong frameworks. Magnetically, these clusters are a great place to study exchange interactions, spin frustration, and the behavior of single-molecule magnets (SMMs). The magnetic characteristics depend on things like the type of metal ions, the bridging ligands, the overall shape, and the local coordination environment. Interestingly, a large number of ligand-assembled clusters exhibit high spin ground states and slow magnetization relaxation, which makes them attractive options for quantum information storage and molecular spintronic devices. This review connects coordination chemistry, supramolecular design, and molecular magnetism of pyridine–amine–carboxylate frameworks, offering insights into fundamental magnetic phenomena and guiding the development of next-generation functional materials. Continued exploration of ligand frameworks and metal combinations holds the potential to yield novel clusters with enhanced or unprecedented magnetic characteristics.
Rajput et al. (Wed,) studied this question.