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A computational study of potential molecular switches that exploit Baird's rule on excited-state aromaticity and antiaromaticity

A series of tentative single-molecule conductance switches which could be triggered by light were examined by computational means using density functional theory (DFT) with non-equilibrium Green's functions (NEGF). The switches exploit the reversal in electron counting rules for aromaticity and...

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Published in:Faraday discussions 2014-01, Vol.174, p.105-124
Main Authors: Löfås, H, Jahn, B O, Wärnå, J, Emanuelsson, R, Ahuja, R, Grigoriev, A, Ottosson, H
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container_title Faraday discussions
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creator Löfås, H
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description A series of tentative single-molecule conductance switches which could be triggered by light were examined by computational means using density functional theory (DFT) with non-equilibrium Green's functions (NEGF). The switches exploit the reversal in electron counting rules for aromaticity and antiaromaticity upon excitation from the electronic ground state (S0) to the lowest ππ* excited singlet and triplet states (S1 or T1), as described by Hückel's and Baird's rules, respectively. Four different switches and one antifuse were designed which rely on various photoreactions that either lead from the OFF to the ON states (switches 1, 2 and 4, and antifuse 5) or from the ON to the OFF state (switch 3). The highest and lowest ideal calculated switching ratios are 1175 and 5, respectively, observed for switches 1 and 4. Increased thermal stability of the 1-ON isomer is achieved by benzannulation (switch 1B-OFF/ON). The effects of constrained electrode-electrode distances on activation energies for thermal hydrogen back-transfer from 1-ON to 1-OFF and the relative energies of 1-ON and 1-OFF at constrained geometries were also studied. The switching ratio is strongly distance-dependent as revealed for 1B-ON/OFF where it equals 711 and 148 when the ON and OFF isomers are calculated in electrode gaps with distances confined to either that of the OFF isomer or to that of the ON isomer, respectively.
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source Royal Society of Chemistry:Jisc Collections:Royal Society of Chemistry Read and Publish 2022-2024 (reading list)
subjects Aromaticity
Chemistry with specialization in Organic Chemistry
Computation
Constraints
Excitation
Isomers
Kemi med inriktning mot organisk kemi
Mathematical analysis
Switches
Switching
title A computational study of potential molecular switches that exploit Baird's rule on excited-state aromaticity and antiaromaticity
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