Ultrafast photoactivation of C─H bonds inside water-soluble nanocages
Author(s) -
Ankita Das,
Imon Mandal,
Ravindra Venkatramani,
Jyotishman Dasgupta
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aav4806
Subject(s) - nanocages , ultrashort pulse , chemistry , biophysics , nanotechnology , photochemistry , crystallography , materials science , chemical engineering , biochemistry , optics , biology , physics , laser , engineering , catalysis
Light energy absorbed by molecules can be harnessed to activate chemical bonds with extraordinary speed. However, excitation energy redistribution within various molecular degrees of freedom prohibits bond-selective chemistry. Inspired by enzymes, we devised a new photocatalytic scheme that preorganizes and polarizes target chemical bonds inside water-soluble cationic nanocavities to engineer selective functionalization. Specifically, we present a route to photoactivate weakly polarized sp C─H bonds in water via host-guest charge transfer and control its reactivity with aerial O. Electron-rich aromatic hydrocarbons self-organize inside redox complementary supramolecular cavities to form photoactivatable host-guest charge transfer complexes in water. An ultrafast C─H bond cleavage within ~10 to 400 ps is triggered by visible-light excitation, through a cage-assisted and solvent water-assisted proton-coupled electron transfer reaction. The confinement prolongs the lifetime of the carbon-centered radical to enable a facile yet selective reaction with molecular O leading to photocatalytic turnover of oxidized products in water.
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