Abstract

Azoheteroarenes are relatively new photoswitchable compounds, where one of the phenyl rings of an azobenzene molecule is replaced by a heteroaromatic five-membered ring. Recent findings on methylated azoheteroarenes show that these photoswitches have potential in various optically addressable applications. The thermal stability of molecular switches is one of the primary factors considered in the design process. For molecular memory or energy storage devices, long thermal relaxation times are required. However, inducing a short thermal isomerization lifetime is required to release stored energy or as an alternative to photoswitching to avoid overlapping absorption spectra that reduce switching fidelity. In this study, we investigate how oriented external electric fields can be used to tune the thermal isomerization properties of three unsubstituted heteroaryl azo compounds-azoimidazole, azopyrazole, and azopyrrole. We show that favorable electric field orientations can increase the thermal half-life of studied molecules by as much as 60 times or reduce it from tens of days to seconds, compared to their half-life values in the field-free environment. A deeper understanding of the relationship between structure and kinetic properties provides insight as to how molecular switches can be designed for their electric field response in switching applications.

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