Login / Signup

Photoisomerization mechanism of iminoguanidinium receptors from spectroscopic methods and quantum chemical calculations.

Duy-Khoi DangJeffrey D EinkaufXinyou MaRadu CustelceanYing-Zhong MaPaul M ZimmermanVyacheslav S Bryantsev
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2024)
The hydrazone functional group, when coupled with a pyridyl substituent, offers a unique class of widely tunable photoswitches, whose E -to- Z photoisomerization equilibria can be controlled through intramolecular hydrogen bonding between the N-H hydrazone donor and the pyridyl acceptor. However, little is known about the photoisomerization mechanism in this class of compounds. To address this issue, we report a pyridine-appended iminoguanidinium photoswitch that is functionally related to acylhydrazones and provides insight into the photoisomerization processes between the E and Z configurations. The E -to- Z photoisomerization of the E -2-pyridyl-iminoguanidinium cation (2PyMIG) in DMSO, prepared as the bromide salt, was quantified by 1 H NMR, and probed in real time with ultrafast laser spectroscopy. The photoisomerization process occurs on a picosecond timescale, resulting in low fluorescence yields. The multiconfigurational reaction path found with the growing string method features a small barrier (4.3 or 6.5 kcal mol -1 ) that the E isomer in the π - π * state must overcome to reach the minimum energy conical intersection (MECI) connecting the E and Z isomers of 2PyMIG. While two possible pathways exist depending on the orientation of the pyridine ring, both exhibit the same qualitative features along the path and at their MECIs, involving simultaneous changes in the CCNN and CNNC dihedral angles. Furthermore, the ground state barrier for pyridine ring rotation is readily accessible, thus a low barrier pathway to the experimentally observed Z isomer exists for both MECIs leading to a transition from the E isomer to photoproduct. Combining multiconfigurational reaction path calculations using growing string method with time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy provided crucial insights into the photoisomerization process of 2PyMIG, resulting in both the computational and experimental results pointing to rapid photoisomerization via a surface crossing between the singlet π - π * and the ground states.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • single molecule
  • high resolution
  • molecular dynamics
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • density functional theory
  • molecular docking
  • systematic review
  • magnetic resonance
  • solid state