Abstract
Hexafluorobenzene and many of its derivatives exhibit a chemoselective photochemical
isomerization, resulting in highly-strained, Dewar-type bicyclohexenes. While the changes in
absorption and emission associated with benzene hexafluorination have been attributed to the socalled “perfluoro effect,” the resulting electronic structure and photochemical reactivity of
hexafluorobenzene are still unclear. We now use a combination of ultrafast time-resolved
spectroscopy, multiconfigurational computations, and non-adiabatic dynamics simulations to
develop a holistic description of the absorption, emission, and photochemical dynamics of the 4πelectrocyclic ring-closing of hexafluorobenzene and the fluorination effect along the reaction
coordinate. Our calculations suggest that the electron-withdrawing fluorine substituents induce a
vibronic coupling between the lowest-energy 1B2u (ππ*) and 1E1g (πσ*) excited states by
selectively stabilizing the σ-type states. The vibronic coupling occurs along vibrational modes
of e2u symmetry which distorts the excited-state minimum geometry resulting in the
experimentally broad, featureless absorption bands, and a ~100 nm Stokes shift in fluorescence–
in stark contrast to benzene. Finally, the vibronic coupling is shown to simultaneously destabilize
the reaction pathway towards hexafluoro-benzvalene and promote molecular vibrations along the
4π ring-closing pathway, resulting in the chemoselectivity for hexafluoro-Dewar-benzene.
Supplementary materials
Title
HFB SI JACS-final
Description
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