RESUMO
We disclose the features of a category of reversible nucleophilic aromatic substitutions in view of their significance and generality in dynamic aromatic chemistry. Exchange of sulfur components surrounding arenes and heteroarenes may occur at 25 °C, in a process that one may call a "sulfur dance". These SNAr systems present their own features, apart from common reversible reactions utilized in dynamic covalent chemistry (DCC). By varying conditions, covalent dynamics may operate to provide libraries of thiaarenes with some selectivity, or conversion of a hexa(thio)benzene asterisk into another one. The reversible nature of SNAr is confirmed by three methods: a convergence of the products distribution in reversible SNAr systems, a related product redistribution between two per(thio)benzenes by using a thiolate promoter, and from kinetic/thermodynamic data. A four-component dynamic covalent system further illustrates the thermodynamically-driven formation of a thiacalix[2]arene[2]pyrimidine by sulfur component exchanges. This work stimulates the implementation of reversible SNAr in aromatic chemistry and in DCC.
RESUMO
A series of phenothiazine-C60/70 dyads containing fulleropyrrolidine tethered to C-3 position (C60-PTZ and C70-PTZ) or to the heteroatom N-position via either phenyl (C60-Ph-PTZ and C70-Ph-PTZ) or phenoxyethyl linkers (C60-PhOEt-PTZ and C70-PhOEt-PTZ) of the phenothiazine were synthesized and light-induced electron transfer events were explored. Optimized studies suggested that the highest molecular orbital (HOMO) resides on donor phenothiazine moiety while lowest molecular orbital (LUMO) on the acceptor fulleropyrrolidine moiety of the dyads. Optical and electrochemical properties suggested no electronic communication between the donor and acceptor moieties in the ground state. However, steady-state emission studies in solvents of varied polarity, involving selective excitation of C60/C70, disclosed that the emission intensity of C60/C70 was quenched in the dyads in the increasing order, C60/70-PTZ > C60/70-Ph-PTZ > C60/70-PhOEt-PTZ as a consequence of the donor-acceptor distance resulted due to spacer lengths. Also, the emission quenching is more pronounced in polar solvents such as DMF compared to a non-polar solvent, toluene. With the support of parallel electrochemical studies, the emission quenching is attributed to intramolecular photo-induced electron transfer occurring from PTZ to (C60/C70)* generating a radical ion pair, PTZ+â -C60-â /PTZ+â -C70-â . Finally, bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells devices inverted fashion prepared by employing the dyads as acceptors, and PTB7 as donor, suggested that the devices prepared from C70 derivatives i.e., PTB7:C70-PTZ and PTB7:C70-PhOEt-PTZ exhibited better power conversion efficiency of 2.66% and 2.15%, respectively over C60 derivatives i.e., PTB7:C60-PTZ and PTB7:C60-PhOEt-PTZ with the efficiencies of 1.80 and 1.72%, respectively. AFM studies revealed that the poor performance of PTB7:C60-PTZ- and PTB7:C60-PhOEt-PTZ-based devices can be ascribed to the lower solubility of the dyads in 1,2-DCB solvent leading to rough morphology.
RESUMO
The synthesis of regioisomeric asterisks (5) and (6) incorporating a benzene core with six 1-naphthylthio or six 2-naphthylthio arms are reported in search for new materials with optoelectronic properties. The consequences on the extension of a π system surrounding a persulfurated benzene core provide a new avenue to study the structural, photophysical, and chemical properties of such family of all-organic phosphors. It also diverts the persulfuration mechanism after two radical cyclizations for making a [5]dithiohelicene by-product (7) and favors dynamic sulfur component exchange reactions surrounding the core. These exchanges convert asterisks (5) and (6), non-phosphorescent at 20 °C to the highly phosphorescent (4) (Ï â¼100 %, solid state at 20 °C). For asterisks (5) and (6), the absence of the typical phosphorescence of the per(phenylthio)benzene core in the solid state at 20 °C and the presence of a weak naphthalene-based phosphorescence at 77â K is attributed to an energy transfer from the triplet state of the persulfurated benzene core to the outer naphthalene moieties, resulting in an antenna system.
RESUMO
A new modular, easy-to-synthesize photocatalyst was prepared by assembling colloidal CdSe/ZnS quantum dots (QD) and gold nanoparticles (AuNP) via their ligands thanks to copper-catalyzed azide to alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) click chemistry. The resulting composite (QD-AuNP) photocatalyst was tested with a benchmark photoredox system previously reported by our group, for which QD alone acted as a photocatalyst but with a modest quantum yield (QY = 0.06%) and turnover number (TON = 350 in 3 h) due to poor charge separation. After optimization, the QD-AuNP composites exhibited much improved photocatalytic performances: up to five times higher TON (2600 in 3 h) and up to 24 times faster reaction in the first 10 min of visible irradiation. Such an improvement is attributed to an efficient electron transfer from QD to AuNP in the photoexcited QD-AuNP composites, which ensures a much better charge separation than that in QD alone. This was confirmed by studying both (i) the quenching of the QD photoluminescence during the synthesis of the QD-AuNP composites and (ii) the blue shift of the AuNP plasmon absorption band due to the accumulation of up to 7400 electrons per AuNP in QD-AuNP composites under visible light irradiation in the presence of electron donors.