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Recent Development of Photodeformable Crystals: From Materials to Mechanisms
Author(s) -
Cheng Zhi Huang,
Rongjuan Huang,
Simin Zhang,
Haodong Sun,
Hailan Wang,
Beibei Du,
Yuxin Xiao,
Tao Yu,
Wei Huang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.8
H-Index - 16
ISSN - 2639-5274
DOI - 10.34133/2021/9816535
Subject(s) - isomerization , nanotechnology , curling , materials science , mechanism (biology) , molecule , chemical physics , chemistry , physics , composite material , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , catalysis
Photodeformable materials are a class of molecules that can convert photon energy into mechanical energy, which have attracted tremendous attention in the last few decades. Owing to their unique photoinduced deformable properties, including fast light-response and diverse mechanical behaviors, photodeformable materials have exhibited great potential in many practical applications such as actuators, photoswitches, artificial muscles, and bioimaging. In this review, we sort out the current state of photodeformable crystals and classify them into six categories by molecular structures: diarylethenes, azobenzenes, anthracenes, olefins, triarylethylenes, and other systems. Three distinct light-responsive mechanisms, photocyclization, trans-cis isomerization, and photodimerization, are revealed to play significant roles in the molecular photodeformation. Their corresponding photodeformable behaviors such as twisting, bending, hopping, bursting, and curling, as well as the potential applications, are also discussed. Furthermore, the challenges and prospective development directions of photodeformable crystals are highlighted.

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