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Nondestructive Photoluminescence Read‐Out by Intramolecular Electron Transfer in a Perylene Bisimide‐Diarylethene Dyad
Author(s) -
Berberich Martin,
Natali Mirco,
Spenst Peter,
Chiorboli Claudio,
Scandola Franco,
Würthner Frank
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.201201484
Subject(s) - perylene , intramolecular force , diarylethene , dyad , photochemistry , photoluminescence , materials science , photoinduced electron transfer , electron transfer , fluorescence , chemistry , optoelectronics , physics , photochromism , optics , stereochemistry , acoustics
A novel, highly stable photochromic dyad 3 based on a perylene bisimide (PBI) fluorophore and a diarylethene (DAE) photochrome was synthesized and the optical and photophysical properties of this dyad were studied in detail by steady‐state and time‐resolved ultrafast spectroscopy. This photochromic dyad can be switched reversibly by UV‐light irradiation of its ring‐open form 3 o leading to the ring‐closed form 3 c , and back reaction of 3 c to 3 o by irradiation with visible light. Solvent‐dependent fluorescence studies revealed that the emission of ring‐closed form 3 c is drastically quenched in solvents of medium (e.g., chloroform) to high (e.g., acetone) polarities, while the emission of the ring‐open form 3 o is appreciably quenched only in highly polar solvents like DMF. The strong fluorescence quenching of 3 c is attributed to a photoinduced electron‐transfer (PET) process from the excited PBI unit to ring‐closed DAE moiety, as this process is thermodynamically highly favorable with a Gibbs free energy value of −0.34 eV in dichloromethane. The electron‐transfer mechanism for the fluorescence quenching of ring‐closed 3 c is substantiated by ultrafast transient measurements in dichloromethane and acetone, revealing stabilization of charge‐separated states of 3 c in these solvents. Our results reported here show that the new photochromic dyad 3 has potential for nondestructive read‐out in write/read/erase fluorescent memory systems.

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