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Stacked antiaromatic porphyrins.

Ryo NozawaHiroko TanakaWon-Young ChaYongseok HongIchiro HisakiSoji ShimizuJi-Young ShinTim KowalczykStephan IrleDongho KimHiroshi Shinokubo
Published in: Nature communications (2016)
Aromaticity is a key concept in organic chemistry. Even though this concept has already been theoretically extrapolated to three dimensions, it usually still remains restricted to planar molecules in organic chemistry textbooks. Stacking of antiaromatic π-systems has been proposed to induce three-dimensional aromaticity as a result of strong frontier orbital interactions. However, experimental evidence to support this prediction still remains elusive so far. Here we report that close stacking of antiaromatic porphyrins diminishes their inherent antiaromaticity in the solid state as well as in solution. The antiaromatic stacking furthermore allows a delocalization of the π-electrons, which enhances the two-photon absorption cross-section values of the antiaromatic porphyrins. This feature enables the dynamic switching of the non-linear optical properties by controlling the arrangement of antiaromatic π-systems on the basis of intermolecular orbital interactions.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • drug discovery
  • water soluble
  • machine learning
  • deep learning
  • living cells
  • quantum dots
  • single molecule