TY - JOUR
T1 - A Change of Pace
T2 - Record Photoresponse through Spirooxazine Confinement in a Metal-Organic Matrix
AU - Thaggard, Grace C.
AU - Wilson, Gina R.
AU - Naik, Mamata
AU - Quetel, Molly A.
AU - Lim, Jaewoong
AU - Maldeni Kankanamalage, Buddhima K.P.
AU - Smith, Mark D.
AU - Shustova, Natalia B.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/11/20
Y1 - 2024/11/20
N2 - Modern and upcoming high-speed optoelectronics as well as secure data storage or solar energy harvesting technologies integrating stimuli-responsive materials fully rely on the fundamental concept of rapid transitions between discrete states possessing different properties. Relatively slow transition kinetics between those states for commonly used classes of photochromic compounds in solution or bulk solids severely restrict the applicability of stimuli-responsive materials for device development. Herein, we report a multivariate strategy based on a photochromic spirooxazine derivative, coordinatively integrated in the solvent-free confined space of a solid-state matrix, such as a metal-organic framework (MOF), for the first time, resulting in the fastest photoresponse reported for any solid-state material to date. The photoisomerization rate for the developed photochromic material was estimated to be 126 s-1, surpassing any literature reports to the best of our knowledge. We also shed light on the fundamentals of the correlation between framework topology, the nature of organic linkers, and the presence/absence of organic solvent within the scaffold voids on the material photoresponse using a series of isoreticular frameworks. Overall, the presented conceptual approach allows for tailoring the isomerization kinetics of photochromic molecules in the solid state over a range of 4 orders of magnitude-an unprecedented span that provides a pathway for addressing challenges associated with the response rate and photoisomerization, which are key criteria in stimuli-responsive material development.
AB - Modern and upcoming high-speed optoelectronics as well as secure data storage or solar energy harvesting technologies integrating stimuli-responsive materials fully rely on the fundamental concept of rapid transitions between discrete states possessing different properties. Relatively slow transition kinetics between those states for commonly used classes of photochromic compounds in solution or bulk solids severely restrict the applicability of stimuli-responsive materials for device development. Herein, we report a multivariate strategy based on a photochromic spirooxazine derivative, coordinatively integrated in the solvent-free confined space of a solid-state matrix, such as a metal-organic framework (MOF), for the first time, resulting in the fastest photoresponse reported for any solid-state material to date. The photoisomerization rate for the developed photochromic material was estimated to be 126 s-1, surpassing any literature reports to the best of our knowledge. We also shed light on the fundamentals of the correlation between framework topology, the nature of organic linkers, and the presence/absence of organic solvent within the scaffold voids on the material photoresponse using a series of isoreticular frameworks. Overall, the presented conceptual approach allows for tailoring the isomerization kinetics of photochromic molecules in the solid state over a range of 4 orders of magnitude-an unprecedented span that provides a pathway for addressing challenges associated with the response rate and photoisomerization, which are key criteria in stimuli-responsive material development.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85209408616
U2 - 10.1021/jacs.4c10636
DO - 10.1021/jacs.4c10636
M3 - Article
C2 - 39501763
AN - SCOPUS:85209408616
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 146
SP - 31746
EP - 31756
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 46
ER -