The Rational Design of Reducing Organophotoredox Catalysts Unlocks Proton-Coupled Electron-Transfer and Atom Transfer Radical Polymerization Mechanisms.
Tommaso BortolatoGianluca SimionatoMarie VayerCristian RossoLorenzo PaoloniEdmondo M BenettiAndrea SartorelDavid LebœufLuca Dell'AmicoPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Photocatalysis has become a prominent tool in the arsenal of organic chemists to develop and (re)imagine transformations. However, only a handful of versatile organic photocatalysts (PCs) are available, hampering the discovery of new reactivities. Here, we report the design and complete physicochemical characterization of 9-aryl dihydroacridines (9ADA) and 12-aryl dihydrobenzoacridines (12ADBA) as strong reducing organic PCs. Punctual structural variations modulate their molecular orbital distributions and unlock locally or charge-transfer (CT) excited states. The PCs presenting a locally excited state showed better performances in photoredox defunctionalization processes (yields up to 92%), whereas the PCs featuring a CT excited state produced promising results in atom transfer radical polymerization under visible light (up to 1.21 Đ , and 98% I*). Unlike all the PC classes reported so far, 9ADA and 12ADBA feature a free NH group that enables a catalytic multisite proton-coupled electron transfer (MS-PCET) mechanism. This manifold allows the reduction of redox-inert substrates including aryl, alkyl halides, azides, phosphate and ammonium salts ( E red up to -2.83 vs SCE) under single-photon excitation. We anticipate that these new PCs will open new mechanistic manifolds in the field of photocatalysis by allowing access to previously inaccessible radical intermediates under one-photon excitation.
Keyphrases
- electron transfer
- visible light
- image quality
- computed tomography
- contrast enhanced
- ionic liquid
- dual energy
- water soluble
- mass spectrometry
- small molecule
- machine learning
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high throughput
- minimally invasive
- positron emission tomography
- energy transfer
- room temperature
- highly efficient
- living cells
- case report
- single molecule
- monte carlo