Structural Capture of η1‑OSO
to η2‑(OS)O Coordination Isomerism in a New
Ruthenium-Based SO2-Linkage Photoisomer That Exhibits Single-Crystal
Optical Actuation
posted on 2022-03-29, 17:10authored byJacqueline M. Cole, David J. Gosztola, Jose de J. Velazquez-Garcia
Recent
discoveries of a range of single-crystal optical actuators
are feeding a new form of materials chemistry, given their broad range
of potential applications, from light-induced molecular motors to
light sensors and optical-memory media. A series of ruthenium-based
coordination complexes that exhibit sulfur dioxide linkage photoisomerization
is of particular interest because they exhibit single-crystal optical
actuation via either optical switching or nano-optomechanical transduction
processes. We report the discovery of a new complex in this series
of chemicals, [Ru(SO2)(NH3)4(3-fluoropyridine)]tosylate2 (1), which forms an η1-OSO
photoisomer with 70% photoconversion upon the application of 505 nm
light. The uncoordinated oxygen atom in this η1-OSO
photoisomer impinges on one of the arene rings in a neighboring tosylate
counter ion of 1 just enough that incipient nano-optomechanical
transduction is observed. The structure and optical properties of
this actuator are characterized via in situ light-induced
single-crystal X-ray diffraction (photocrystallography), single-crystal
optical absorption spectroscopy and microscopy, as well as single-crystal
Raman spectroscopy. These materials-characterization methods were
also used to track thermally induced reverse isomerization processes
in 1. One of these processes involves an η1-OSO to η2-(OS)O transition, which was found
to proceed sufficiently slowly at 110 K that its structural mechanism
could be determined via a time sequence of photocrystallography experiments.
The resulting data allowed us to structurally capture the transition,
which was shown to occur via a form of coordination isomerism. Our
newfound knowledge about this structural mechanism will aid the molecular
design of new [RuSO2] complexes with functional applications.