Abstract
Photoswitchable arylazopyrozoles 2 and 3 form hydrogels at a concentration of 1.2% (w/v). With a molecular weight of 258.11 g/mol, these are the lowest known molecular weight hydrogelators that respond reversibly to light. Single-crystal X-ray structures show anisotropic aggregation of 2 and 3 is driven by in-plane hydrogen bonding interactions and š
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stacking. Photoswitching of 2 and 3 from the E- to the Z-form by 365 nm light results in a macrocopic gelāsol transition; nearly an order of magnitude reduction in the measured elastic and loss moduli. Cryogenic transmission electron microscopy suggests that the 29Ā±7 nm wide sheets in the E-2 gel state narrow to 13Ā±2 nm upon photoswitching to the predominantly Z-2 solution state. In the case of 2, photoswitching is reversible through cycles of 365 nm and 520 nm excitation with little fatigue. The release of a Rhodamine B dye encapsulated in gels formed from 2 and 3 can be accelerated more than 20-fold upon photoswitching with 365 nm light, demonstrating these materials are suitable for light-controlled cargo release.
Supplementary materials
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1. NMR data
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2. FTIR data
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3. UV vis data
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4. UV-vis Stability data
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5. pKa values of compound 1-3
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6. X-ray data
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7. Hirshfeld analysis of X-ray data
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8. Rheology data
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9. Dye release data
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SI dwarfs 22Sept
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