Excited-State Dynamics and Photochromism of Extended Tetraphenylethylene Derivatives and Their Control by Amino Conjugation Effect

Abstract

Tetraphenylethylene (TPE) derivatives are key building blocks for solid-state fluorophores, offering tunable emission wavelengths and high quantum efficiencies. While it is nowadays well established, especially in recent literature, that rotation around the central C=C bond dominates deactivation in solution and that its restriction in solid state results in aggregation-induced emission (AIE), the impact of substitution on TPE dynamics in solution has remained largely unexplored. This is likely due to the challenge of efficiently separating E and Z isomers in most synthesized molecules. Here, we report the solution-phase photophysics of stereopure, extended TPE derivatives using both steady-state and femtosecond transient spectroscopy. Introducing triphenylamine (TPA) substituents generates distinct spectral differences between E and Z isomers, enabling modulation of the photostationary state and selective control of the isomeric equilibrium via irradiation wavelength. Notably, this photochromism is accompanied by a pronounced decrease in the photoisomerization quantum yield (Φiso) relative to non-extended TPEs, consistent with the “amino conjugation effect” previously observed in stilbene derivatives. Time-resolved spectroscopies provide mechanistic insight, revealing the substituent’s influence on emissive and dark state lifetimes, as well as access to a conical intersection through S1-state rotation around the ethylenic bond, supported by TDDFT calculations. These findings offer a new understanding of electron-donor substituted TPEs and their potential as tunable photochromic materials.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Feb 2026
Accepted
09 Mar 2026
First published
12 Mar 2026

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Excited-State Dynamics and Photochromism of Extended Tetraphenylethylene Derivatives and Their Control by Amino Conjugation Effect

M. Seinfeld, X. Fu, T. Le Bahers, C. Andraud, S. Haacke, J. Rouillon and C. Monnereau, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6CP00449K

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