A light-driven molecular brake displaying an antilock function is constructed by introducing a nonradiative photoinduced electron transfer (PET) decay channel to compete with the trans (brake-off) → cis (brake-on) photoisomerization. A fast release of the brake can be achieved by deactivating the PET process through addition of protons. The cycle of irradiation-protonation-irradiation-deprotonation conducts the brake function and mimics the antilock braking system (ABS) of vehicles.
We used transient absorption and time-correlated single photon counting (TCSPC) techniques to investigate the charge transfer reaction in monosilylene-spaced aminostyrene stilbene monomer. With 266 nm excitation, both stilbene (sti) and aminostyrene (ast) moieties were excited. In nonpolar solvents, the transient absorption band centered at 600 nm appeared promptly and is assigned to the excited state of sti*; this state relaxes at time constant 1.2-1.4 ps and is explained to proceed energy transfer to ast 1ππ*. The second transient band at 460 nm is assigned to absorption of ast 2ππ*; this state accessed from direct excitation has a lifetime 65 ps. This agrees with the observation of 85-89 ps emission decay from the TCSPC measurements. In polar solvent, an excited absorption band centered at 530 nm appeared with a rise time constant 0.2-0.6 ps. This band is assigned to the charge transfer state. This charge transfer process occurs as the acceptor fluorophore (sti) is excited and the electron moves from the occupied π orbital of donor ast to sti* forming aststi. This rise time corresponds to the combined processes of charge and energy transfers. The second rise in this charge-transfer state at time constant 0.74-1.5 ps is observed and assigned to occur from electron hopping from ast 2π* orbital to sti π*. The third time constant 18-31 ps is observed and is attributed to conversion of anti to syn form in the charge-transfer state because the syn form is more polar and further stabilized in polar environment. A rapid charge transfer process in monosilylene-spaced system although two Si-C single bonds are used as spacer is possibly because of the short distance of the ast and the sti conjugated systems, resulting in π orbital overlap between donor and acceptor.
We studied the excited-state dynamics of trans-4-(N-arylamino)stilbenes with aryl = phenyl (p1H), 4-methoxyphenyl (p1OM), or 4-cyanophenyl (p1CN) in solvents of varied polarity and viscosity by using femtosecond transient absorption and time-correlated single photon counting techniques. In nonpolar solvents the decay is triexponential, in which the rapid component corresponds to vibrational cooling combined with solvation, the intermediate temporal component 41-120 ps to trans-cis isomerization, and the long one ∼1 ns to fluorescence decay of the S state. The S state has a delocalized geometry and charge-transfer characteristics, corresponding to a planar intramolecular charge transfer (PICT) state. In polar solvents, an excited-state absorption band appears near 520 and 480 nm for p1OM and p1CN, respectively but not for p1H. This band has a rise lifetime of 4.3/7.5, 16.3/9.4, and 29.5/16 ps for p1CN/p1OM in acetonitrile (ACN), dimethylformamide (DMF), and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), respectively and matches the decay of the 600 nm PICT band. This band is thus assigned to the absorption of a singlet twisted intramolecular charge transfer state (TICT). The conversion rate decreases as the solvent viscosity is increased and is consistent with a large structural variation amplitude. Theoretical calculations using density functional theory (DFT), method PEB0, were employed to obtain the optimized structures and energies of those states. The PICT state possesses delocalized π electrons along the molecule. The TICT for p1CN is formed by twisting about the aminostilbene-benzonitrile C-N bond by ∼90°, but it is about the stilbene-aniline C-N bond for p1OM. We observed faster conversion rates for p1CN in alcoholic solvents, in which the lifetimes for both the PICT and TICT states are shortened to 20-99 ps and 120-660 ps, respectively, as a result of solvent-solute H-bonding interactions. In p1OM, the TICT state has an elongated C[double bond, length as m-dash]C bond in the stilbene moiety, which might facilitate the trans-cis isomerization reaction and thus account for the relatively short lifetime of 58-420 ps in polar solvents.
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