Photoinduced and Thermal Relaxation in Surface-Grafted
Azobenzene-Based Monolayers: A Molecular Dynamics Simulation Study
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Abstract
Extensive
atomistic molecular dynamics simulations have been employed
to study the structure and molecular orientational relaxation of azobenzene-based
monolayers grafted to a solid substrate. Systems with surface coverage
of 0.6 nm<sup>2</sup>/molecule were investigated over a wide temperature
range ranging from 298 K, where the mesogens show local ordering and
the monolayer dynamics was found to be glassy, up to 700 K, where
the azobenzene groups have a nearly isotropic orientational distribution,
with a subnanosecond characteristic orientational relaxation time
scale. Biased simulations that model single-molecule thermal excitation
and conformational isomerization have been conducted to obtain insight
into the mechanisms for photoinduced athermal fluidization and monolayer
reorganization observed experimentally in this system. Our simulations
clearly indicate that <i>trans</i>–<i>cis</i> conformational isomerization transitions of azobenzene units can
lead to reorientation of mesogens and to the formation of a monolayer
with strong macroscopic in-plane nematic order. While local heating
created by excitation process can facilitate this process, thermal
excitation alone is not sufficient to induce ordering in the monolayer.
Instead, the work done by a molecule undergoing <i>cis–trans</i> isomerization on the cage of neighboring molecules is the key mechanism
for photofluidization and orientational ordering in dMR monolayers
exposed to linearly polarized light leading to relaxation dynamics
that can be described in terms of higher effective temperature. The
obtained simulation results are discussed in light of recent experimental
data reported for these systems