Abstract
This study explores the photochemical conversion of BN-Dewar benzene into BN-benzvalene derivatives,
offering a strategic route to heteroatom-containing valence isomers with distinctive electronic
properties. Using time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) and electron localization
function (ELF) analyses, the excited-state mechanism and associated structural rearrangements were
elucidated. Vertical excitation to the 𝑆1 state was found to weaken the C=C and B-N bonds while
strengthening the N-Si bond in silyl-substituted derivatives, a key factor enabling efficient BNbenzvalene
formation. Two minimum energy conical intersections MECI1 and MECI2 govern the
deactivation pathways: MECI1 promotes irreversible C2-B bond cleavage and C1-B bond formation,
driving the system toward BN-Benzvalene, whereas MECI2 enables relaxation back to the BNDewar
benzene reactant. Nitrogen substitution, particularly with trialkylsilyl groups, significantly
enhances the reaction yield by stabilizing charge redistribution and lowering Franck–Condon excitation
energies. Nonradiative decay via MECI1 proceeds barrierlessly, favoring the production of
BN-benzvalene. Finally, ELF analysis reveals that bond formation occurs through electron density
migration rather than via radical intermediates.



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