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Visible Light‐Driven Molecular Switches and Motors: Recent Developments and Applications

Hao Wang, Hari Krishna Bisoyi, Xinfang Zhang, Fathy Hassan, Quan Li

2021Chemistry - A European Journal126 citationsDOI

Abstract

Inspired by human vision, a diverse range of light-driven molecular switches and motors have been developed for fundamental understanding and application in material science and biology. Recently, the design and synthesis of visible light-driven molecular switches and motors have been actively pursued. This emerging trend is partly motivated to avoid the harmful effects of ultraviolet light, which was necessary to drive the classical molecular switches and motors at least in one direction, impeding their employment in biomedical and photopharmacology applications. Moreover, visible light-driven molecular switches and motors are demonstrated to enable benign optical materials for advanced photonic devices. Therefore, during the past several years, visible light-driven molecular switches based on azobenzene derivatives, diarylethenes, 1,2-dicyanodithienylethenes, hemithioindigo derivatives, iminothioindoxyls, donor-acceptor Stenhouse adducts, and overcrowded alkene based molecular motors have been judiciously designed, synthesized, and used in the development of functional materials and systems for a wide range of applications. In this Review, we present the recent developments toward the design of visible light-driven molecular switches and motors, with their applications in the fabrication of functional materials and systems in material science, bioscience, pharmacology, etc. The visible light-driven molecular switches and motors realized so far undoubtedly widen the scope of these interesting compounds for technological and biological applications. We hope this Review article could provide additional impetus and inspire further research interests for future exploration of visible light-driven advanced materials, systems, and devices.

Topics & Concepts

Molecular switchMolecular motorNanotechnologyPhotonicsMolecular machineComputer scienceMaterials scienceOptoelectronicsPhysicsQuantum mechanicsMoleculePhotochromic and Fluorescence ChemistryLuminescence and Fluorescent MaterialsPhotoreceptor and optogenetics research
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