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Counterintuitive Photochemistry of an Isolated Acridinyl Radical: ConPET via Preassembly, Solvated Electrons or a Long-Lived Excited State?

Samuel J. Horsewill, Katherine M.M. Sharrock, Péter P. Fehér, Jack M. Woolley, Imre Pápai, Daniel J. Scott

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Photoredox chemistry has seen a dramatic rise in popularity in recent years, but mechanistic understanding has persistently lagged behind reaction development itself. This is particularly true for the emerging area of consecutive photoinduced electron transfer (conPET), which has attracted both great interest due to its ability to activate inert substrates selectively and under mild conditions and continuing controversy over its mechanistic feasibility. We describe herein the isolation of the key radical intermediate state of an acridinium-based conPET catalyst and detailed investigations of its photochemistry by a suite of (photo)reactivity, photoluminescence and transient absorption techniques, supported by computational studies. We observe strong wavelength and solvent dependencies in the reactivity profile, which correlate well with observations of a long-lived, fluorescent excited state that would be compatible with diffusion-limited reactivity. However, photoluminescence and transient absorption spectroscopies suggest that, counter-intuitively, this state does not actually participate in reactivity. Instead, changes occur far faster than the diffusion limit, which provides strong, direct evidence for preassembly of the photocatalyst and substrate prior to photoexcitation. Further inspection also indicates parallel formation of solvated electrons, likely providing the major pathway under previously reported synthetic conditions, suggesting that otherwise competing rationales for conPET can in fact operate simultaneously.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202506701
JournalAngewandte Chemie International Edition
Volume64
Issue number34
Early online date24 Jun 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Aug 2025

Data Availability Statement

The data that support the findings of this study are available in the Supporting Information of this article.

Funding

The authors would like to thank the EPSRC for award of an Early Career Fellowship (EP/V056069/1), the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation office (NKFIH) for grant funding (K-142486), the University of Bath Institute for Sustainability and Climate Change for financial support, the research facilities at the University of Bath (https://doi.org/10.15125/mx6j-3r54) for technical support and assistance in this work[92] and Dr Sebastian Pike at the University of Warwick for facilitating transient absorption (TA) investigations. TA measurements were performed with the support of the Warwick Analytical Sciences Centre (EP/V007688/1). The authors would like to thank the EPSRC for award of an Early Career Fellowship (EP/V056069/1), the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation office (NKFIH) for grant funding (K\u2010142486), the University of Bath Institute for Sustainability and Climate Change for financial support, the research facilities at the University of Bath ( https://doi.org/10.15125/mx6j\u20103r54 ) for technical support and assistance in this work and Dr Sebastian Pike at the University of Warwick for facilitating transient absorption (TA) investigations. TA measurements were performed with the support of the Warwick Analytical Sciences Centre (EP/V007688/1).

FundersFunder number
University of Bath
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research CouncilEP/V056069/1
Nemzeti Kutatási Fejlesztési és Innovációs HivatalK‐142486
Warwick Analytical Sciences CentreEP/V007688/1

Keywords

  • Ab initio calculations
  • ConPET
  • Photoredox catalysis
  • Radical ions
  • Time-resolved spectroscopy

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Catalysis
  • General Chemistry

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