Dicationic Acridinium/Carbene Hybrids as Strongly Oxidizing Photocatalysts.
Samaresh C SauMatthias SchmitzChris BurdenskiMarcel BaumertPatrick W AntoniChristoph KerzigMax M HansmannPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
A new design concept for organic, strongly oxidizing photocatalysts is described based upon dicationic acridinium/carbene hybrids. A highly modular synthesis of such hybrids is presented, and the dications are utilized as novel, tailor-made photoredox catalysts in the direct oxidative C-N coupling. Under optimized conditions, benzene and even electron-deficient arenes can be oxidized and coupled with a range of N -heterocycles in high to excellent yields with a single low-energy photon per catalytic turnover, while commonly used acridinium photocatalysts are not able to perform the challenging oxidation step. In contrast to traditional photocatalysts, the hybrid photocatalysts reported here feature a reversible two-electron redox system with regular or inverted redox potentials for the two-electron transfer. The different oxidation states could be isolated and structurally characterized supported by NMR, EPR, and X-ray analysis. Mechanistic experiments employing time-resolved emission and transient absorption spectroscopy unambiguously reveal the outstanding excited-state potential of our best-performing catalyst (+2.5 V vs SCE), and they provide evidence for mechanistic key steps and intermediates.
Keyphrases
- visible light
- electron transfer
- high resolution
- ionic liquid
- magnetic resonance
- solid state
- machine learning
- bone mineral density
- gene expression
- genome wide
- mass spectrometry
- nitric oxide
- electron microscopy
- computed tomography
- body composition
- single molecule
- hydrogen peroxide
- deep learning
- dna methylation
- brain injury
- blood brain barrier
- gold nanoparticles