posted on 2021-03-30, 18:36authored byPalas Roy, Andy S. Sardjan, Arjen Cnossen, Wesley R. Browne, Ben L. Feringa, Stephen R. Meech
The
design of unidirectional photomolecular motors demands a critical
understanding of an ultrafast photochemical isomerization. An intermediate
dark excited state mediates the reaction via a conical intersection
(CI) with the ground state, but a correlation between molecular structure
and photoisomerization efficiency has remained elusive. Here femtosecond
stimulated Raman spectroscopy captures vibrational spectra of the
dark state in a set of molecular motors bearing different substituents.
A direct correlation between isomerization quantum yield, dark state
lifetime, and excited state vibrational spectrum is found. Electron
withdrawing substituents lead to activity in lower frequency modes,
which we correlate with a pyramidalization distortion at the ethylenic
axle occurring within 100 fs. This structure is not formed with an
electron donating substituent, where the axle retains double bond
character. Further structural reorganization is observed and assigned
to excited state reorganization and charge redistribution on the sub-picosecond
time scale. The correlation of the dark state structure with photoconversion
performance suggests guidelines for developing new more efficient
motor derivatives.