Reductive Activation of Aryl Chlorides by Tuning the Radical Cation Properties of N‐Phenylphenothiazines as Organophotoredox Catalysts

Author:

Weick Fabian1,Hagmeyer Nina2,Giraud Madeleine1,Dietzek‐Ivanšić Benjamin23,Wagenknecht Hans‐Achim1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Organic Chemistry Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) Fritz-Haber-Weg 6 76131 Karlsruhe Germany

2. Institute of Physical Chemistry Friedrich Schiller University Jena Lessingstraße 4 07743 Jena Germany

3. Research Department Functional Interfaces Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology Jena Albert-Einstein-Straße 9 07745 Jena Germany

Abstract

AbstractAryl chlorides as substrates for arylations present a particular challenge for photoredox catalytic activation due to their strong C(sp2)−Cl bond and their strong reduction potential. Electron‐rich N‐phenylphenothiazines, as organophotoredox catalysts, are capable of cleaving aryl chlorides simply by photoinduced electron transfer without the need for an additional electrochemical activation setup or any other advanced photocatalysis technique. Due to the extremely strong reduction potential in the excited state of the N‐phenylphenothiazines the substrate scope is high and includes aryl chlorides both with electron‐withdrawing and electron‐donating substituents. We evidence this reactivity for photocatalytic borylations and phosphonylations. Advanced time‐resolved transient absorption spectroscopy in combination with electrochemistry was the key to elucidating and comparing the unusual photophysical properties not only of the N‐phenylphenothiazines, but also of their cation radicals as the central intermediates in the photocatalytic cycle. The revealed photophysics allowed the excited‐state and radical‐cation properties to be fine‐tuned by the molecular design of the N‐phenylphenothiazines; this improved the photocatalytic activity.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Chemistry,Catalysis,Organic Chemistry

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