RESUMO
Carbazole is a heterocyclic motif that can be found in a diverse array of natural and unnatural products displaying a wide range of biological and physiological properties. Furthermore, this heterocycle is part of electronic materials like photoconducting polymers and organic optoelectronic materials owing to its excellent photophysical characteristics. Consequently, the development of synthetic strategies for carbazole scaffolds holds potential significance in biological and material fields. In this regard, a variety of preparation methods has been developed to exploit their efficient and distinct formation of new C-C and C-heteroatom bonds under mild conditions and enabling broad substrate diversity and functional group tolerance. Therefore, this review focuses on the synthesis of a set of carbazole derivatives describing a variety of methodologies that involve direct irradiation, photosensitization, photoredox, electrochemical and thermal cyclization reactions.
RESUMO
Blue LEDs-irradiation of a mixture of N,N,N',N'-tetramethylethylenediamine (TMEDA) and perfluoroalkyl iodides (RF-I) - Electron Donor Acceptor (EDA)-complex - in the presence of triphenylamines (TPAs) in an aqueous solvent mixture afforded mono-perfluoroalkylated triphenylamines (RF-TPA) in good yields. These RF-TPA were further subjected to acetone-sensitized [6π]-electrocyclization at 315â nm-irradiation affording exclusively perfluoroalkylated endo-carbazole derivatives (RF-CBz) in quantitative yields. Mechanistic studies and photophysical properties of products are studied.
RESUMO
Herein, we have showed the photophysical properties of favipiravir and its 6-substituted analogues. Also, we interpreted the origin of fluorescence of favipiravir and its 6-substituted analogues as a function of tautomerism modulation in ground and excited states. Favipiravir, the 6-fluorine derivative, showed the best photophysical profile, exhibiting a dominant emission wavelength of 430 nm, a high quantum yield (Q.Y.) of 1.0 and a long-lived state (10 ns). Its analogues also showed a maximum emission at 430 nm, but their Q.Y. values were 5-fold lower than that found for favipiravir, decreasing as a function of 6-substitution as follows: F > Cl > Br > I > H. Pyrazines bearing the least electronegative 6-substituent (X = Br, I, H) showed an extra lifetime, which was shorter (0.2-0.3 ns) and less abundant (>15%) than the main lifetime (10 ns, 85%). Further 2D excitation-emission matrix and solvent studies supported that these 3-hydroxy-2-pyrazinecarboxamides present two emissive states. The first of them (λem = 430 nm), which was the most abundant, most fluorescent and long-lived state, was characterized as "locally excited" (LE). Its fluorescence was favored with an increase of the hydrogen-donor nature of the solvent and for pyrazines having a high enolic characteristic. Thus, the high LE-fluorescence of these types of pyrazines depends on the keto-tautomerization of the ground state using a protic solvent and its feasible enol-tautomerization upon excitation. Finally, the second excited state (λem = 536 nm) was suggested as an excited-state intramolecular proton-transfer (ESIPT), and it was observed only, although discretely, for pyrazines bearing the least electronegative 6-substituent.
RESUMO
The substituent and solvent effects on the spectroscopic behavior and on the photoinduced [6π]-electrocyclization reaction of substituted triphenylamine derivatives have been investigated. Direct irradiation of triphenylamines bearing electron-donor substituents in different solvents has provided for the first time the substituted exo/endo carbazole derivatives from modest to good yields, whereas triphenylamines bearing electron-withdrawing substituents did not provide the carbazoles due to the formation of charge transfer complexes (CTCs). A corollary of the experiments purports that the photoreaction is favored with weak electron-acceptor groups in polar solvents. The lowest-frequency absorption bands of the triarylamines (π,π* electronic transitions) displayed bathochromic shifts as the solvent polarity is increased. The fluorescence emission spectra of triarylamines bearing electron-donor substituents behave as mirror images of the lowest absorption bands, showing dependence on the solvent polarity. Conversely, triarylamines bearing formyl, acetyl, and nitro groups formed CTCs behaving as good fluorescence chromophores in polar solvents. Hammett correlations on the ΔE(0,0) energies of monosubstituted amines showed a bell-shape behavior where the ρ values depended on the solvent polarity. The physical quenching of the photoreaction of triarylamines has demonstrated for the first time that the triplet excited state is univocally the photoreactive state leading to exo/endo carbazole derivatives.
RESUMO
Direct irradiation of mono-, di-, and trisubstituted triphenylamine derivatives in acetonitrile as solvent with light of 254 nm has been systematically investigated, revealing that the exo/endo carbazole derivatives were formed as the main photoproducts from modest to good yields for triphenylamines substituted with electron-donor and neutral substituents. The kinetic profiles of the photoreaction were also recorded, and the consumption rate constants (k) were measured. These kinetic parameters show dependence on the nature of the substituents, and linear Hammett correlations were carried out to showcase the substituent effect. On the other hand, the spectroscopic behavior of the electron-rich substituted triphenylamines has been analyzed, suggesting that the fluorescence emission spectra display a mirror image of the lower energy absorption bands, while for those amines bearing electron-acceptor groups the formation of charge-transfer complexes and their fluorescence emissions constitute the main deactivation pathway of the photoreaction.
RESUMO
Diverse models of intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) have been proposed for interpreting the origin of the charge-transfer (CT) state in donor-acceptor (D-A) dyes. However, a large variety of fused-heterocyclic dyes containing a pseudo-aromatic ring in the rigid structure have shown to be incompatible with them. To approximate a solution within the ICT concept, we reported a novel ICT model called partially aromatized intramolecular charge transfer (PAICT). PAICT involves the generation of a CT state from an ICT that occurred within a pre-excited D-A fused-heterocyclic structure possessing a pseudo-aromatic or unstable aromatic ring as the acceptor moiety. The model was proposed from the multiple-emissive mesomeric D-A N1-aryl-2-(trifluoromethyl)benzo[b][1,8]naphthyridin-4(1H)-one, whose excited mesomeric states, which are defined by the aromatic and pseudo-aromatic forms of the pyrindin-4(1H)-one ring, led to a common partial aromatized CT state upon excitation via PAICT. The latter was supported through theoretical calculations on the excited mesomeric states, one-dimensional (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) excitation-emission measurements in different solvents, and the detection of three excited states by lifetime measurements upon 370 nm excitation. The existence of mesomerism was supposed from: (i) two overlapping bands at 370-390 (or 400-420 nm) in UV-vis spectra, (ii) the direct interaction between the pyridinic nitrogen of one molecule and the carbonylic oxygen of the other found in the solid state and, (iii) the detection of three excited states by lifetime measurements. The PAICT opens new perspectives for interpreting the charge-transfer phenomenon in fused-heterocyclic dyes, in particular, those containing a pseudo-aromatic or unstable aromatic ring as an acceptor moiety.