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Visible-Light Organic Photocatalysis for Latent Radical-Initiated Polymerization via 2e(–)/1H(+) Transfers: Initiation with Parallels to Photosynthesis

[Image: see text] We report the latent production of free radicals from energy stored in a redox potential through a 2e(–)/1H(+) transfer process, analogous to energy harvesting in photosynthesis, using visible-light organic photoredox catalysis (photocatalysis) of methylene blue chromophore with a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Aguirre-Soto, Alan, Lim, Chern-Hooi, Hwang, Albert T., Musgrave, Charles B., Stansbury, Jeffrey W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4046762/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24786755
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja502441d
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] We report the latent production of free radicals from energy stored in a redox potential through a 2e(–)/1H(+) transfer process, analogous to energy harvesting in photosynthesis, using visible-light organic photoredox catalysis (photocatalysis) of methylene blue chromophore with a sacrificial sterically hindered amine reductant and an onium salt oxidant. This enables light-initiated free-radical polymerization to continue over extended time intervals (hours) in the dark after brief (seconds) low-intensity illumination and beyond the spatial reach of light by diffusion of the metastable leuco-methylene blue photoproduct. The present organic photoredox catalysis system functions via a 2e(–)/1H(+) shuttle mechanism, as opposed to the 1e(–) transfer process typical of organometallic-based and conventional organic multicomponent photoinitiator formulations. This prevents immediate formation of open-shell (radical) intermediates from the amine upon light absorption and enables the “storage” of light-energy without spontaneous initiation of the polymerization. Latent energy release and radical production are then controlled by the subsequent light-independent reaction (analogous to the Calvin cycle) between leuco-methylene blue and the onium salt oxidant that is responsible for regeneration of the organic methylene blue photocatalyst. This robust approach for photocatalysis-based energy harvesting and extended release in the dark enables temporally controlled redox initiation of polymer syntheses under low-intensity short exposure conditions and permits visible-light-mediated synthesis of polymers at least 1 order of magnitude thicker than achievable with conventional photoinitiated formulations and irradiation regimes.