Abstract
This work aims at unraveling the effects of co-crystallization on the optical properties of an N-salicylideneaniline-derived molecular switch transforming between an enol and a keto form. This is achieved by way of a two-step multi-scale method where (i) the molecular geometry and unit cell parameters are optimized using a periodic boundary conditions density functional theory method and (ii) the optical properties are computed for a selection of clusters embedded in an array of point-charges that reproduce the crystal field electronic potential. The optical properties (vertical excitation energies and oscillator strengths) are obtained at the RI-CC2/def2-TZVPD level of approximation. This method allows us to decompose the effects of co-crystallization into (i) indirect effects, the geometry changes of the chromophore due to crystal packing with the coformer, and (ii) direct ones, the polarization due to the interacting coformer and to the crystal field. For the former effects, variations of a crucial torsion angle lead to modification of the -conjugation and therefore to the decrease or increase of the excitation energies. About the latter, they are antagonistic: (i) the coformer is not directly involved in the excitations but its polarization decreases the excitation energies while (ii) the crystal field has the opposite effect. For the co-crystals with succinic and fumaric acids, combining these direct and indirect effects leads to a hypsochromic shift of the first absorption band with respect to the reference crystal, in agreement with experimental data.
Highlights
Co-crystallization can be used to tune the properties of molecular switches: for example, a N-salicylideneaniline, which equilibrates between an enol (E) and a keto (K) form becomes photochromic upon co-crystallization with two different coformers: succinic acid (SA) or fumaric acid (FA) [1]
This work used the crystal geometries that have been optimized in Ref. [2]
The root mean square deviation for the atomic positions of the PYV3 co-crystals compared to PYV3 range from 0.131 Å
Summary
Co-crystallization can be used to tune the properties of molecular switches: for example, a N-salicylideneaniline (anil), which equilibrates between an enol (E) and a keto (K) form becomes photochromic upon co-crystallization with two different coformers: succinic acid (SA) or fumaric acid (FA) [1]. The coformer can have effects at multiple levels: changing the thermodynamics and/or the kinetics of the tautomeric equilibrium and modifying its electronic properties such as the UV/Vis absorption or the excited state dynamics. These are generally related to a change of the geometry as well as to steric hindrance and confinement effects.
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