Red light-driven electron sacrificial agents-free photoreduction of inert aryl halides via triplet-triplet annihilation

Selective photoactivation of inert aryl halides is a fundamental challenge in organic synthesis. Specially, the long-wavelength red light is more desirable than the widely-applied blue light as the excitation source for photoredox catalysis, due to its superior penetration depth. However, the long-w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2023-02, Vol.14 (1), p.1102-9, Article 1102
Hauptverfasser: Zeng, Le, Huang, Ling, Lin, Wenhai, Jiang, Lin-Han, Han, Gang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Selective photoactivation of inert aryl halides is a fundamental challenge in organic synthesis. Specially, the long-wavelength red light is more desirable than the widely-applied blue light as the excitation source for photoredox catalysis, due to its superior penetration depth. However, the long-wavelength red light-driven photoactivation of inert aryl halides remains a challenge, mainly because of the low energy of the single long-wavelength red photon. Herein, we report the photoreduction of aryl bromides/chlorides with 656 nm LED via triplet-triplet annihilation (TTA) strategy. This method is based on our discovery that the commonly used chromophore of perylene can serve as an efficient and metal-free photocatalyst to enable the photoreduction of inert aryl halides without the conventional need for electronic sacrificial agents. By introducing a red light-absorbing photosensitizer to this perylene system, we accomplish the long-wavelength red light-driven photoreduction of aryl halides via sensitized TTA mechanism. Moreover, the performance of such a TTA-mediated photoreduction can be significantly enhanced when restricting the rotation freedom of phenyl moiety for perylene derivatives to suppress their triplet nonradiative transition, in both small and large-scale reaction settings. The functionalization of aryl halides via photocatalysis typically involves the use of blue light. Here, the authors report the photoreduction of aryl halides enabled by red light; the method does not require a sacrificial electron donor.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-36679-7