4.7 Article

Effect of halogen substitution on energies and dynamics of reversible photomechanical crystals based on 9-anthracenecarboxylic acid

Journal

CRYSTENGCOMM
Volume 23, Issue 34, Pages 5931-5943

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1ce00846c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR-1810514, CHE-1955554]
  2. MURI on Photomechanical Material Systems [ONR N00014-18-1-2624]
  3. KSAU-HS/KAIMRC [RC10/104]
  4. XSEDE [TG-CHE110064]
  5. U.S. Air Force

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9-Anthracene carboxylic acid derivatives form a family of thermally reversible photomechanical molecular crystals, with steric interactions playing a dominant role in photodimer formation and an energetic threshold of 80-90 kJ per mole for the dimerization reaction. Fluorinated 9ACs exhibit absent intermolecular bonding, explaining observed trends in dissociation kinetics and mechanical reset times. Photodimer dissociation kinetics depend on the initial photodimer amount, leading to a complex relationship between halogen atom substitution and dissociation rates.
9-Anthracene carboxylic acid derivatives comprise a family of thermally reversible photomechanical molecular crystals. The photomechanical response relies on a [4 + 4] photodimerization followed by dissociation that occurs on timescales of seconds to minutes. A combined theoretical and experimental investigation is undertaken to better understand how chemical modification of the anthracene core influences energetics of both the isolated molecule and the crystal lattice. We use both density functional theory and dispersion-corrected Moller-Plesset perturbation theory computational methods to establish orbital energies, photodimerization reaction energies, and lattice energies for a set of substituted 9-anthracene carboxylic acid molecules. The calculations reveal that steric interactions play a dominant role in the ability to form photodimers and indicate an energetic threshold of 80-90 kJ per mole for the dimerization reaction. Examination of intermolecular bonding in a subset of fluorinated 9ACs revealed the absence of HMIDLINE HORIZONTAL ELLIPSISF intermolecular bond formation and energy differences that can explain observed trends in the dissociation kinetics and mechanical reset times. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching experiments shows that the photodimer dissociation kinetics depend on the amount of initial photodimer, preventing a straightforward correlation between halogen atom substitution and dissociation rates using the Bell-Evans-Polanyi principle. The results clarify how molecular structure affects intermolecular interactions and photoreactivity in this family of molecular crystals, but the origin of the complex photodimer dissociation dynamics remains an open question.

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