Protein Information

ID 857
Name Red 1
Synonyms ADAR 2; ADAR2; ADAR2a; ADAR2a L1; ADAR2a L2; ADAR2a L3; ADAR2b; ADAR2c ADAR2d…

Compound Information

ID 106
Name azobenzene
CAS diphenyldiazene

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
17064180 Poprawa-Smoluch M, Baggerman J, Zhang H, Maas HP, De Cola L, Brouwer AM: Photoisomerization of disperse red 1 studied with transient absorption spectroscopy and quantum chemical calculations. J Phys Chem A. 2006 Nov 2;110(43):11926-37.
The photoisomerization of the push-pull substituted azo dye Disperse Red 1 is studied using femtosecond time-resolved absorption spectroscopy and other spectroscopic and computational techniques. In comparison with azobenzene, the pipi* state is more stabilized by the effects of push-pull substitution than the npi* state, but the latter is probably still the lowest in energy. This conclusion is based on the kinetics, anisotropy of the excited state absorption spectrum, the spectra of the ground states, and quantum chemical calculations. The S (1)(npi*) state is formed from the initially excited pipi* state in <0.2 ps, and decays to the ground state with time constants of 0.9 ps in toluene, 0.5 ps in acetonitrile, and 1.4 ps in ethylene glycol. Thermal isomerization transforms the Z isomer produced to the more stable E isomer with time constants of 29 s (toluene), 28 ms (acetonitrile), and 2.7 ms (ethylene glycol). The pathway of photoisomerization is likely to be rotation about the N=N bond. Quantum chemical calculations indicate that along the inversion pathway ground and excited state energy surfaces remain well separated, whereas rotation leads to a region where conical intersections can occur. For the ground-state Z to E isomerization, conclusive evidence is lacking, but inversion is more probably the favored pathway in the push-pull substituted systems than in the parent azobenzene.
2(0,0,0,2)