Athermal photofluidization of glasses

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Abstract

Azobenzene and its derivatives are among the most important organic photonic materials, with their photo-induced trans-cis isomerization leading to applications ranging from holographic data storage and photoalignment to photoactuation and nanorobotics. A key element and enduring mystery in the photophysics of azobenzenes, central to all such applications, is athermal photofluidization: illumination that produces only a sub-Kelvin increase in average temperature can reduce, by many orders of magnitude, the viscosity of an organic glassy host at temperatures more than 100 K below its thermal glass transition. Here we analyse the relaxation dynamics of a dense monolayer glass of azobenzene-based molecules to obtain a measurement of the transient local effective temperature at which a photo-isomerizing molecule attacks its orientationally confining barriers. This high temperature (T loc ∼800 K) leads directly to photofluidization, as each absorbed photon generates an event in which a local glass transition temperature is exceeded, enabling collective confining barriers to be attacked with near 100% quantum efficiency. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited.

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Fang, G. J., MacLennan, J. E., Yi, Y., Glaser, M. A., Farrow, M., Korblova, E., … Clark, N. A. (2013). Athermal photofluidization of glasses. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2483

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