Nanohybrid systems in which semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) functionalize molecular photoswitches (PhSs) offer a promising platform for light-responsive materials. These systems leverage the reversible photoisomerization of PhSs and the size-tunable optical properties of QDs to enable functionalities in biomedicine, catalysis, and sensing. While strong light-matter coupling has been used to modulate photoisomerization in PhSs, such approaches are limited by ultrafast dynamics and the requirement for resonant cavity architectures. Here, we propose intrinsic excitonic coupling to shape photoisomerization pathways, taking advantage of the nanosecond-scale lifetimes of such hybrid states and the lower structural complexity of QD-based systems. Specifically, by applying the recently developed hybrid configuration interaction - a non-perturbative multiscale approach - to azobenzene and cadmium selenide quantum dots, we show avoided crossings near resonance between the photoswitch M0 -> M1 transition and the lowest QD exciton, accompanied by excitonic splittings in the few meV range. Analysis of hybrid dipoles shows a redistribution of oscillator strength between the molecular and QD components, confirming the delocalized nature of the excitations. These results demonstrate that cavity-free PhS-QD nanohybrids can exhibit coherent excitonic reshaping of molecular photoisomerization, highlighting their potential as tunable, light-driven nanodevices.
Exciton-driven photoisomerization in photoswitch–quantum dot nanohybrids / López Díaz, Daniel; Gil, Gabriel.; Corni, Stefano; Goldoni, Guido. - In: NANOSCALE. - ISSN 2040-3364. - 18:17(2026), pp. 9225-9235. [10.1039/d5nr04330a]
Exciton-driven photoisomerization in photoswitch–quantum dot nanohybrids
Corni Stefano
;Goldoni Guido
2026
Abstract
Nanohybrid systems in which semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) functionalize molecular photoswitches (PhSs) offer a promising platform for light-responsive materials. These systems leverage the reversible photoisomerization of PhSs and the size-tunable optical properties of QDs to enable functionalities in biomedicine, catalysis, and sensing. While strong light-matter coupling has been used to modulate photoisomerization in PhSs, such approaches are limited by ultrafast dynamics and the requirement for resonant cavity architectures. Here, we propose intrinsic excitonic coupling to shape photoisomerization pathways, taking advantage of the nanosecond-scale lifetimes of such hybrid states and the lower structural complexity of QD-based systems. Specifically, by applying the recently developed hybrid configuration interaction - a non-perturbative multiscale approach - to azobenzene and cadmium selenide quantum dots, we show avoided crossings near resonance between the photoswitch M0 -> M1 transition and the lowest QD exciton, accompanied by excitonic splittings in the few meV range. Analysis of hybrid dipoles shows a redistribution of oscillator strength between the molecular and QD components, confirming the delocalized nature of the excitations. These results demonstrate that cavity-free PhS-QD nanohybrids can exhibit coherent excitonic reshaping of molecular photoisomerization, highlighting their potential as tunable, light-driven nanodevices.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Nanosca 2026 18, 9225.pdf
embargo fino al 01/06/2027
Tipologia:
VOR - Versione pubblicata dall'editore
Dimensione
1.18 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.18 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I metadati presenti in IRIS UNIMORE sono rilasciati con licenza Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal, mentre i file delle pubblicazioni sono rilasciati con licenza Attribuzione 4.0 Internazionale (CC BY 4.0), salvo diversa indicazione.
In caso di violazione di copyright, contattare Supporto Iris




