LED-illuminated NMR studies of flavin-catalyzed photooxidations reveal solvent control of the electron-transfer mechanism

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Abstract

Mechanistic insights into chemical photocatalysis are mainly the domain of UV/Vis spectroscopy, because NMR spectroscopy has been limited by the type of illumination so far. An improved LED-based illumination device can be used to obtain NMR reaction profiles of photocatalytic reactions under synthetic conditions and perform both photo-CIDNP and intermediate studies. Flavin-catalyzed photooxidations of alcohols show the potential of this setup. After identical initial photoreaction steps the stabilization of a downstream intermediate is the key to the further reaction mechanism and the reactivity. As a chemical photocatalyst flavin can act either as a one- or a two-electron mediator when the stability of the zwitterionic radical pair is moldulated in different solvents. This demonstrates the importance of downstream intermediates and NMR-accessible complementary information in photocatalytic reactions and suggests the control of photoorganic reactions by solvent effects. (Chemical Equation Presented).

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Feldmeier, C., Bartling, H., Magerl, K., & Gschwind, R. M. (2015). LED-illuminated NMR studies of flavin-catalyzed photooxidations reveal solvent control of the electron-transfer mechanism. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 54(4), 1347–1351. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.201409146

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