Author:
Sinicropi Adalgisa,Martin Elena,Ryazantsev Mikhail,Helbing Jan,Briand Julien,Sharma Divya,Léonard Jérémie,Haacke Stefan,Cannizzo Andrea,Chergui Majed,Zanirato Vinicio,Fusi Stefania,Santoro Fabrizio,Basosi Riccardo,Ferré Nicolas,Olivucci Massimo
Abstract
Single molecules that act as light-energy transducers (e.g., converting the energy of a photon into atomic-level mechanical motion) are examples of minimal molecular devices. Here, we focus on a molecular switch designed by merging a conformationally locked diarylidene skeleton with a retinal-like Schiff base and capable of mimicking, in solution, different aspects of the transduction of the visual pigment Rhodopsin. Complementary ab initio multiconfigurational quantum chemistry-based computations and time-resolved spectroscopy are used to follow the light-induced isomerization of the switch in methanol. The results show that, similar to rhodopsin, the isomerization occurs on a 0.3-ps time scale and is followed by <10-ps cooling and solvation. The entire (2-photon-powered) switch cycle was traced by following the evolution of its infrared spectrum. These measurements indicate that a full cycle can be completed within 20 ps.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
93 articles.
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