diarylethene
Diarylethene is a class of organic compounds that exhibit photochromism, meaning they can change color upon exposure to light of specific wavelengths. This property arises from their ability to undergo reversible photochemical ring-closing and ring-opening reactions. In their open-ring form, diarylethenes typically absorb light in the ultraviolet (UV) region. Upon irradiation with UV light, the two aryl groups, which are separated by a central ethene unit, rotate and undergo a cycloaddition reaction, forming a closed-ring isomer. This closed-ring form has a different electronic structure and therefore absorbs visible light, leading to a color change. The process is reversible; irradiation with visible light of an appropriate wavelength can induce the ring-opening reaction, returning the molecule to its original colorless or UV-absorbing state.
The structure of diarylethenes generally consists of two aromatic rings connected by a conjugated pi system,