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Elucidating the Mechanism of Excited-State Bond Homolysis in Nickel-Bipyridine Photoredox Catalysts.

David A CaganDaniel BímBreno SilvaNathanael P KazmierczakBrendon J McNicholasRyan G Hadt
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
Ni 2,2'-bipyridine (bpy) complexes are commonly employed photoredox catalysts of bond-forming reactions in organic chemistry. However, the mechanisms by which they operate are still under investigation. One potential mode of catalysis is via entry into Ni(I)/Ni(III) cycles, which can be made possible by light-induced, excited-state Ni(II)-C bond homolysis. Here, we report experimental and computational analyses of a library of Ni(II)-bpy aryl halide complexes, Ni( R bpy)( R ' Ph)Cl (R = MeO, t -Bu, H, MeOOC; R' = CH 3 , H, OMe, F, CF 3 ), to illuminate the mechanism of excited-state bond homolysis. At given excitation wavelengths, photochemical homolysis rate constants span 2 orders of magnitude across these structures and correlate linearly with Hammett parameters of both bpy and aryl ligands, reflecting structural control over key metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) and ligand-to-metal charge-transfer (LMCT) excited-state potential energy surfaces (PESs). Temperature- and wavelength-dependent investigations reveal moderate excited-state barriers (Δ H ‡ ∼ 4 kcal mol -1 ) and a minimum energy excitation threshold (∼55 kcal mol -1 , 525 nm), respectively. Correlations to electronic structure calculations further support a mechanism in which repulsive triplet excited-state PESs featuring a critical aryl-to-Ni LMCT lead to bond rupture. Structural control over excited-state PESs provides a rational approach to utilize photonic energy and leverage excited-state bond homolysis processes in synthetic chemistry.
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