» Articles » PMID: 40017739

Excited Organic Radicals in Photoredox Catalysis

Overview
Journal JACS Au
Specialty Chemistry
Date 2025 Feb 28
PMID 40017739
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Many important synthetic-oriented works have proposed excited organic radicals as photoactive species, yet mechanistic studies raised doubts about whether they can truly function as photocatalysts. This skepticism originates from the formation of (photo)redox-active degradation products and the picosecond decay of electronically excited radicals, which is considered too short for diffusion-based photoinduced electron transfer reactions. From this perspective, we analyze important synthetic transformations where organic radicals have been proposed as photocatalysts, comparing their theoretical maximum excited state potentials with the potentials required for the observed photocatalytic reactivity. We summarize mechanistic studies of structurally similar photocatalysts indicating different reaction pathways for some catalytic systems, addressing cases where the proposed radical photocatalysts exceed their theoretical maximum reactivity. Additionally, we perform a kinetic analysis to explain the photoinduced electron transfer observed in excited radicals on subpicosecond time scales. We further rationalize the potential anti-Kasha reactivity from higher excited states with femtosecond lifetimes, highlighting how future photocatalysis advancements could unlock new photochemical pathways.

References
1.
Pinosa E, Bassan E, Cetin S, Villa M, Potenti S, Calogero F . Light-Induced Access to Carbazole-1,3-dicarbonitrile: A Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescent (TADF) Photocatalyst for Cobalt-Mediated Allylations. J Org Chem. 2022; 88(10):6390-6400. PMC: 10204086. DOI: 10.1021/acs.joc.2c01825. View

2.
Pfund B, Steffen D, Schreier M, Bertrams M, Ye C, Borjesson K . UV Light Generation and Challenging Photoreactions Enabled by Upconversion in Water. J Am Chem Soc. 2020; 142(23):10468-10476. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c02835. View

3.
Kerzig C, Guo X, Wenger O . Unexpected Hydrated Electron Source for Preparative Visible-Light Driven Photoredox Catalysis. J Am Chem Soc. 2019; 141(5):2122-2127. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b12223. View

4.
Huang H, Lambert T . Regiodivergent Electrophotocatalytic Aminooxygenation of Aryl Olefins. J Am Chem Soc. 2022; 144(41):18803-18809. PMC: 10405276. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c08951. View

5.
Zeng L, Liu T, He C, Shi D, Zhang F, Duan C . Organized Aggregation Makes Insoluble Perylene Diimide Efficient for the Reduction of Aryl Halides via Consecutive Visible Light-Induced Electron-Transfer Processes. J Am Chem Soc. 2016; 138(12):3958-61. DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5b12931. View