Several carbazole-based boron dipyrromethene (BODIPY) dyes were synthesized by organometallic approaches. Thiazole, benzothiazole, imidazole, benzimidazole, triazole, and indolone substituents were introduced at the 1-position of the carbazole moiety, and boron complexation of each dipyrrin generated the corresponding compounds 1, 2 a, and 3-6. The properties of these products were investigated by UV/Vis and fluorescence spectroscopy, cyclic voltammetry, X-ray crystallography, and DFT calculations. These compounds exhibited large Stokes shifts, and compounds 1, 2 a, and 3-5 fluoresced both in solution and in the solid state. Complex 2 a showed the highest fluorescence quantum yield (ΦF ) in the solid state, therefore boron complexes of the carbazole-benzothiazole hybrids 2 b-f, which had several different substituents, were prepared and the effects of the substituents on the photophysical properties of the compounds were examined. The fluorescence properties showed good correlation with the results of crystal-packing analyses, and the dyes exhibited color-tunable solid-state fluorescence.
Carbazole-based BODIPY dimers 2a-g were synthesized via direct arylation. They showed red-shifted solid-state fluorescence spectra as compared with the corresponding monomer. In addition, unsymmetrical dimers 2d, 2f, and 2g with two different substituents showed red fluorescence with improved quantum yields in the solid state.
This paper reports the selective conversion of alkyl azido groups at the carbonyl α-position into oximes, and one-pot triple click conjugation is demonstrated.
This paper reports on the selective
conversion of alkyl azido groups
at the carbonyl α-position to diazo compounds. Through β-elimination
of dinitrogen, followed by hydrazone formation/decomposition, α-azidocarbonyl
moieties were transformed into α-diazo carbonyl groups in one
step. As these reaction conditions do not involve aryl or general
alkyl azides, site-selective conversions of di- and triazides were
achieved. Through this method, the successive site-selective conjugation
of the triazido molecule with three different components is demonstrated.
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