Shedding Light on the Photoisomerization Pathway of Donor-Acceptor Stenhouse Adducts

Open Access
Authors
  • M. Di Donato
  • M.M. Lerch
  • A. Lapini
  • A.D. Laurent
  • A. Iagatti
  • L. Bussotti
  • S.P. Ihrig
  • M. Medved
  • D. Jacquemin
  • W. Szymanski
  • W.J. Buma ORCID logo
  • P. Foggi
  • B.L. Feringa
Publication date 2017
Journal Journal of the American Chemical Society
Volume | Issue number 139 | 44
Pages (from-to) 15596-15599
Number of pages 4
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Van 't Hoff Institute for Molecular Sciences (HIMS)
Abstract
Donor-acceptor Stenhouse adducts (DASAs) are negative photochromes that hold great promise for a variety of applications. Key to optimizing their switching properties is a detailed understanding of the photoswitching mechanism, which, as yet, is absent. Here we characterize the actinic step of DASA-photoswitching and its key intermediate, which was studied using a combination of ultrafast visible and IR pump-probe spectroscopies and TD-DFT calculations. Comparison of the time-resolved IR spectra with DFT computations allowed to unambiguously identify the structure of the intermediate, confirming that light absorption induces a sequential reaction path in which a Z-E photoisomerization of C2-C3 is followed by a rotation around C3-C4 and a subsequent thermal cyclization step. First and second-generation DASAs share a common photoisomerization mechanism in chlorinated solvents with notable differences in kinetics and lifetimes of the excited states. The photogenerated intermediate of the second-generation DASA was photo-accumulated at low temperature and probed with time-resolved spectroscopy, demonstrating the photoreversibility of the isomerization process. Taken together, these results provide a detailed picture of the DASA isomerization pathway on a molecular level.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.7b09081
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