Issue 36, 2024

Reversible change of luster color from pale yellow to wine red in microcrystalline film by photochromic diarylethene having a naphthyl group

Abstract

Recently, metal-free organic materials that change their luster color in response to external stimuli have been reported. The development of such materials could have a significant impact on applications in the decorative and ink industries. Here we report a reversible change in luster color from pale yellow to wine red in microcrystalline film by using a photochromic diarylethene having thiazole rings and a naphthyl group. The diarylethene used can easily form thin plate-like crystals by recrystallization. In using these crystals, they were stacked in the same plane, forming a microcrystalline film. The combination of specular reflections from the surface of the plate-like crystals and multiple reflections from their stacked structure brings about a pale yellow luster effect. This film showed a reversible change in luster color from pale yellow to wine red due to the photocyclization–cycloreversion reactions of diarylethene. Such metallic-appearing luster materials, which reversibly control the luster color in widely different color coordinates depending on the light, could have a significant impact on decorative and ink applications.

Graphical abstract: Reversible change of luster color from pale yellow to wine red in microcrystalline film by photochromic diarylethene having a naphthyl group

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Jul 2024
Accepted
16 Aug 2024
First published
28 Aug 2024

CrystEngComm, 2024,26, 5090-5098

Reversible change of luster color from pale yellow to wine red in microcrystalline film by photochromic diarylethene having a naphthyl group

R. Shiromae, Y. Nakagawa, S. Watanabe, R. Nishimura, M. Morimoto, S. Yokojima, S. Nakamura and K. Uchida, CrystEngComm, 2024, 26, 5090 DOI: 10.1039/D4CE00717D

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