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Isoacridone dyes with parallel reactivity from both singlet and triplet excited states for biphotonic catalysis and upconversion

Metal-based photosensitizers commonly undergo quantitative intersystem crossing into photoactive triplet excited states. In contrast, organic photosensitizers often feature weak spin–orbit coupling and low intersystem crossing efficiencies, leading to photoactive singlet excited states. By modifying...

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Autores principales: Pfund, Björn, Hutskalova, Valeriia, Sparr, Christof, Wenger, Oliver S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10583676/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37860649
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc02768f
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author Pfund, Björn
Hutskalova, Valeriia
Sparr, Christof
Wenger, Oliver S.
author_facet Pfund, Björn
Hutskalova, Valeriia
Sparr, Christof
Wenger, Oliver S.
author_sort Pfund, Björn
collection PubMed
description Metal-based photosensitizers commonly undergo quantitative intersystem crossing into photoactive triplet excited states. In contrast, organic photosensitizers often feature weak spin–orbit coupling and low intersystem crossing efficiencies, leading to photoactive singlet excited states. By modifying the well-known acridinium dyes, we obtained a new family of organic photocatalysts, the isoacridones, in which both singlet- and triplet-excited states are simultaneously photoactive. These new isoacridone dyes are synthetically readily accessible and show intersystem crossing efficiencies of up to 52%, forming microsecond-lived triplet excited states (T(1)), storing approximately 1.9 eV of energy. Their photoactive singlet excited states (S(1)) populated in parallel have only nanosecond lifetimes, but store ∼0.4 eV more energy and act as strong oxidants. Consequently, the new isoacridone dyes are well suited for applications requiring parallel triplet–triplet energy transfer and photoinduced electron transfer elementary steps, which have become increasingly important in modern photocatalysis. In proof-of-principle experiments, the isoacridone dyes were employed for Birch-type arene reductions and C–C couplings via sensitization-initiated electron transfer, substituting the commonly used iridium or ruthenium based photocatalysts. Further, in combination with a pyrene-based annihilator, sensitized triplet–triplet annihilation upconversion was achieved in an all-organic system, where the upconversion quantum yield correlated with the intersystem crossing quantum yield of the photosensitizer. This work seems relevant in the greater contexts of developing new applications that utilize biphotonic photophysical and photochemical behavior within metal-free systems.
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spelling pubmed-105836762023-10-19 Isoacridone dyes with parallel reactivity from both singlet and triplet excited states for biphotonic catalysis and upconversion Pfund, Björn Hutskalova, Valeriia Sparr, Christof Wenger, Oliver S. Chem Sci Chemistry Metal-based photosensitizers commonly undergo quantitative intersystem crossing into photoactive triplet excited states. In contrast, organic photosensitizers often feature weak spin–orbit coupling and low intersystem crossing efficiencies, leading to photoactive singlet excited states. By modifying the well-known acridinium dyes, we obtained a new family of organic photocatalysts, the isoacridones, in which both singlet- and triplet-excited states are simultaneously photoactive. These new isoacridone dyes are synthetically readily accessible and show intersystem crossing efficiencies of up to 52%, forming microsecond-lived triplet excited states (T(1)), storing approximately 1.9 eV of energy. Their photoactive singlet excited states (S(1)) populated in parallel have only nanosecond lifetimes, but store ∼0.4 eV more energy and act as strong oxidants. Consequently, the new isoacridone dyes are well suited for applications requiring parallel triplet–triplet energy transfer and photoinduced electron transfer elementary steps, which have become increasingly important in modern photocatalysis. In proof-of-principle experiments, the isoacridone dyes were employed for Birch-type arene reductions and C–C couplings via sensitization-initiated electron transfer, substituting the commonly used iridium or ruthenium based photocatalysts. Further, in combination with a pyrene-based annihilator, sensitized triplet–triplet annihilation upconversion was achieved in an all-organic system, where the upconversion quantum yield correlated with the intersystem crossing quantum yield of the photosensitizer. This work seems relevant in the greater contexts of developing new applications that utilize biphotonic photophysical and photochemical behavior within metal-free systems. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-10-02 /pmc/articles/PMC10583676/ /pubmed/37860649 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc02768f Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Pfund, Björn
Hutskalova, Valeriia
Sparr, Christof
Wenger, Oliver S.
Isoacridone dyes with parallel reactivity from both singlet and triplet excited states for biphotonic catalysis and upconversion
title Isoacridone dyes with parallel reactivity from both singlet and triplet excited states for biphotonic catalysis and upconversion
title_full Isoacridone dyes with parallel reactivity from both singlet and triplet excited states for biphotonic catalysis and upconversion
title_fullStr Isoacridone dyes with parallel reactivity from both singlet and triplet excited states for biphotonic catalysis and upconversion
title_full_unstemmed Isoacridone dyes with parallel reactivity from both singlet and triplet excited states for biphotonic catalysis and upconversion
title_short Isoacridone dyes with parallel reactivity from both singlet and triplet excited states for biphotonic catalysis and upconversion
title_sort isoacridone dyes with parallel reactivity from both singlet and triplet excited states for biphotonic catalysis and upconversion
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10583676/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37860649
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc02768f
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