Abstract

By alternate irradiation with UV and visible light, reversible topographical changes were observed on the microcrystalline surfaces of diarylethene derivatives above the glass transition temperatures (Tg) of their open-ring isomers. For the photogenerated closed-ring isomers, the crystal growth proceeded at the surface softened by molecular movement. This is the self-aggregation of the closed-ring isomers. The photogenerated surface topographies appear depending on the crystal habits of the closed-ring isomers. Reflecting the properties (crystal habits) of diarylethene derivatives, we obtained cubic, needle, and plate-shaped crystals of the closed-ring isomers on the microcrystalline surfaces of the open-ring isomers by irradiation with UV light. Even a derivative having one isopropyl group at a reactive carbon atom, whose closed-ring isomer is thermally unstable, showed photoinduced topographical changes, because the Tg of the open-ring isomer is around ambient temperature.

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