Publications by authors named "Takao Doi"

Photoactive molecules that reversibly switch upon visible light irradiation are one of the most attractive targets for biological as well as imaging applications. One possible approach to prepare such photoswitches is to extend π-conjugation length of molecules and shift the absorption bands to longer wavelengths. Although several attempts have been demonstrated based on this approach for diarylethene (DAE) photoswitches, photoreactivity of the DAE derivatives is dramatically suppressed when the conjugation length is extended by connecting aromatic dyes at the side positions of aryl groups in the DAE unit.

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Single-molecule fluorescence photoswitching plays an essential role in ultrahigh-density (Tbits/inch(2)) optical memories and super-high-resolution fluorescence imaging. Although several fluorescent photochromic molecules and fluorescent proteins have been applied, so far, to optical memories and super-high-resolution imaging, their performance is unsatisfactory because of the absence of "non-destructive fluorescence readout capability". Here we report on a new molecular design principle of a molecule having non-destructive readout capability.

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A fluorescent photochromic molecule, which is composed of a photochromic diarylethene (DE) and a fluorescent perylenebisimide (PBI), was synthesized and its fluorescence photoswitching was studied. The fluorescence quantum yield of the open-ring isomer is constant irrespective of solvent polarity, while that of the closed-ring isomer decreases with an increase in the dielectric constant of solvents. Femtosecond time-resolved transient and fluorescence lifetime measurements revealed that the fluorescence quenching of the closed-ring isomer is attributed to the intramolecular electron transfer from the PBI chromophore to the DE unit.

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