Advancing the Mechanosensitivity of Atropisomeric Diarylethene Mechanophores Through a Lever-Arm Effect

21 November 2024, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Understanding structure-mechanical activity relationships (SMARs) in polymer mechanochemistry is essential for the rational design of mechanophores with desired properties, yet SMARs in noncovalent mechanical transformations remain relatively underexplored. In this study, we designed a subset of diarylethene mechanophores based on a lever-arm hypothesis and systematically investigated their mechanical activity toward a noncovalent-yet-chemical conversion of atro-pisomer stereochemistry. Results from DFT calculations, single-molecule force spectroscopy (SMFS) measurements, and ultrasonication experiments collectively support the lever-arm hypothesis and confirm the exceptional sensitivity of chemo-mechanical coupling in these atropisomers. Notably, the transition force for the diarylethene M3 featuring extended 5-phenylbenzo[b]thiophene aryl groups is determined to be 131 pN ± 4 pN by SMFS. This value is lower than typically recorded for other mechanically induced chemical processes, highlighting its exceptional sensitivity to low-magnitude forces. This work contributes a fundamental understanding of chemo-mechanical coupling in atropisomeric configurational mechanophores and paves the way for designing highly sensitive mechanochemical processes that could facilitate the study of nanoscale mechanical behaviors across scientific disciplines.

Keywords

mechanophore
configuration
atropisomer
diarylethene
mechanosensitivity
stereochemistry
noncovalent
mechanochemistry
isomerization
mechanical force
photoswitch
stress sensing
single molecule force spectroscopy
photochromic
conformation

Supplementary materials

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