T-type diarylethenes for molecular solar thermal energy storage: aromaticity as a design principle
Abstract
Molecular photoswitches that absorb sunlight and store it in the form of chemical energy are attractive for applications in molecular solar thermal energy storage (MOST) systems. Typically, these systems utilize the absorbed energy to photoisomerize into a metastable form, which acts as an energy reservoir. Diarylethenes featuring aromatic ethene π-linkers have garnered research interest in recent years as a promising class of T-type photoswitches, which undergo photocyclization from an aromatic ring-open form into a less aromatic or non-aromatic ring-closed form. Based on several recent computational and experimental studies, this perspective analyzes the potential of these switches for MOST applications. Specifically, we discuss how they can be made to simultaneously achieve high energy-storage densities, long energy-storage times, and high photocyclization quantum yields by tuning the aromatic character of the ethene π-linker.
- This article is part of the themed collection: 2025 Focus and Perspective articles