Conspectus Nature is intrinsically able to control kinetics, conversion, and selectivity of biochemical processes by means of confined reaction environments such as enzyme pockets, bilayer membranes, micelles, vesicles, cells, or bioorganic frameworks. The main reason for this fact is the optimal molecular alignment and restricted motion of reactant molecules compared to those found in bulk solution. Under this inspiration, a number of synthetic photo-nanoreactors based on supramolecular self-assembled systems have been developed during the last decades, including mesoporous inorganic materials, microemulsions, micelles, vesicles, lipid bilayer foams, polyelectrolyte nanoparticles, etc. In a broader sense, nanoreactor technology constitutes nowadays a promising tool to enhance organic synthesis under sustainable reaction conditions. In general, nanoreactors change the essential properties of the molecules within them, thus affecting their chemical reactivity. Among the nanoreactor-like systems described in the literature to facilitate photochemical processes, the more recent use of viscoelastic supramolecular gels, typically made of low-molecular-weight (LMW) compounds self-assembled through noncovalent interactions, as compartmentalized reaction media is particularly appealing due to the versatility of these materials in terms of fabrication, properties, and processability. Furthermore, the high specific surface areas found in supramolecular gels, their stimuli-responsive reversibility, good diffusion properties enhancing the interactions between reactants and the three-dimensional (3D) porous network, functional tunability, and blocking effect of external oxygen are some of the most important features that can benefit photoinduced processes carried out in confined gel media. Not surprisingly, the efficiency of photochemical processes inside gel media is largely dependent on the type of reaction, characteristics of the gel network, solvent nature, reactant properties, and reaction conditions. Thus, the main focus of this Account is to provide a concise overview of the most relevant examples reported by us and others in order to illustrate the main advantages associated with the emerging use of gel-based materials as nonconventional reaction media to facilitate and control photochemical reactions. In particular, photodimerization, triplet–triplet annihilation upconversion (TTA-UC) coupled to single electron transfer (SET), photooxidation, photoreduction, and trifluoromethylation reactions will be illustrated during the discussion. These examples suggest that gel-based media can provide a versatile platform for the discovery of new reaction pathways and facilitate the way that photochemical reactions are traditionally carried out in academia and industry in terms of reaction conditions and required infrastructure. In addition, the use of physical or chemical gels as reaction systems may also accelerate high-throughput screening of photocatalysts. Overall, a judicious choice of gelators, reactants, solvent, and rea...
In this work, we demonstrate that useful C-C bond-forming photoredox catalysis can be performed in air using easily prepared gel networks as reaction media to give similar results as are obtained under inert atmosphere conditions. These reactions are completely inhibited in homogeneous solution in air. However, the supramolecular fibrillar gel networks confine the reactants and block oxygen diffusion, allowing air-sensitive catalytic activity under ambient conditions. We investigate the mechanism of this remarkable protection, focusing on the boundary effect in the self-assembled supramolecular gels that enhances the rates of productive reactions over diffusion-controlled quenching of excited states. Our observations suggest the occurrence of triplet-sensitized chemical reactions in the gel networks within the compartmentalized solvent pools held between the nanofibers. The combination of enhanced viscosity and added interfaces in supramolecular gel media seems to be a key factor in facilitating the reactions under aerobic conditions.
In article number 2001683, David Díaz Díaz and co‐workers present a series of strong hydrogel membranes prepared via Cu(I)‐catalyzed photo‐click polymerization using a glycerol ethoxylate core. These materials display thermoresponsive and shape‐memory actuation based on a judicious hydrophilic‐hydrophobic molecular balance, and present a high potential for biomedical applications including drug delivery and artificial muscles.
Natural evolution has provided multicellular organisms with sophisticated functionalities and repair mechanisms for surviving and preserve their functions after an injury and/or infection. In this context, biological systems have inspired material scientists over decades to design and fabricate both self-healing polymeric materials and soft actuators with remarkable performance. The latter are capable of modifying their shape in response to environmental changes, such as temperature, pH, light, electrical/magnetic field, chemical additives, etc. In this review, we focus on the fusion of both types of materials, affording new systems with the potential to revolutionize almost every aspect of our modern life, from healthcare to environmental remediation and energy. The integration of stimuli-triggered selfhealing properties into polymeric soft actuators endow environmental friendliness, cost-saving, enhanced safety, and lifespan of functional materials. We discuss the details of the most remarkable examples of self-healing soft actuators that display a macroscopic movement under specific stimuli. The discussion includes key experimental data, potential limitations, and mechanistic insights. Finally, we include a general table providing at first glance information about the nature of the external stimuli, conditions for self-healing and actuation, key information about the driving forces behind both phenomena, and the most important features of the achieved movement. CONTENTS AH2.5. Self-Healing Electric Actuators AU 2.6. Self-Healing pH, Mechanical, and Redox Actuators BC 3. Tabular Overview BE 4.
Heteroarene boronate esters constitute valuable intermediates in modern organic synthesis. As building blocks, they can be further applied to the synthesis of new materials, since they can be easily transformed into any other functional group. Efforts toward novel and efficient strategies for their preparation are clearly desirable. Here, we have achieved the borylation of commercially available heteroarene halides under very mild conditions in an easy-to-use gel nanoreactor. Its use of visible light as the energy source at room temperature in photocatalyst-free and aerobic conditions makes this protocol very attractive. The gel network provides an adequate stabilizing microenvironment to support wide substrate scope, including furan, thiophene, selenophene, and pyrrole boronate esters.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.