Mechanistic Elucidation of the Hula-Twist Photoreaction in Hemithioindigo.
Tobias FischerJonas LeitnerAaron GerwienPeter MayerAndreas DreuwHenry DubeJosef WachtveitlPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
The Hula-Twist (HT) photoreaction represents a fundamental photochemical pathway for bond isomerizations and is defined by the coupled motion of a double bond and an adjacent single bond. This photoreaction has been suggested as the defining motion for a plethora of light-responsive chromophores such as retinal within opsins, coumaric acid within photoactive yellow protein, or vitamin D precursors, and stilbenes in solution. However, due to the fleeting character of HT photoproducts a direct experimental observation of this coupled molecular motion was severely hampered until recently. To solve this dilemma, the Dube group has designed a molecular framework able to deliver unambiguous experimental evidence of the HT photoreaction. Using sterically crowded atropisomeric hemithioindigo (HTI) the HT photoproducts are rendered thermally stable and can be observed directly after their formation. However, following the ultrafast excited state process of the HT photoreaction itself has not been achieved so far and thus crucial information for an elementary understanding is still missing. In this work, we present the first ultrafast spectroscopy study of the HT photoreaction in HTI and probe the competition between different excited state processes. Together with extensive excited state calculations a detailed mechanistic picture is developed explaining the significant solvent effects on the HT photoreaction and revealing the intricate interplay between productive isomerizations and unproductive twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT) processes. With this study essential insights are thus gained into the mechanism of complex multibond rotations in the excited state, which will be of primary importance for further developments in this field.