Pyridinium molecules are developed as electron- and energy-transfer mediators to boost the activity of air oxygen and thus achieve highly efficient photocatalytic oxidation of alcohols without any noble metal and additional co-catalysts/additives under mild conditions.
Benefiting from the regulation of ROS species through
a simple
and feasible strategy, an efficient and switchable photocatalytic
protocol for the chemoselective synthesis of aldehydes and carboxylic
acids via oxidation of primary alcohols under mild conditions has
been developed. Using the pyridinium derivative as a metal-free organic
photocatalyst, a variety of benzyl alcohols can be converted into
aldehydes or carboxylic acids under an air atmosphere at room temperature
with high selectivity and yield via simple solvent regulation. A feasible
tandem reaction combining the pyridinium-catalyzed alcohol-to-aldehyde
conversion and catalyst-free photoinduced oxidation of aromatic aldehydes
provides a powerful and efficient approach for the one-pot oxidation
of benzyl alcohols to carboxylic acids, while a small amount of water
can effectively regulate the competition of electron transfer and
energy transfer and inhibit the generation of carboxylic acids, facilitating
highly efficient and selective oxidation of alcohols to aldehydes.
Dual-photoresponsive coordination polymer displaying color-distinguishable radical states has been obtained based on the synergism of photocycloaddition and photoinduced electron transfer reactions.
Photomechanical motion triggered by [2 + 2] cycloaddition as well as simultaneous photochromic and fluorescence changes has been achieved by introducing flexible methylene groups and cation–π interactions into a pyridinium-based coordination complex.
Charge transfer complexes (CTCs) have become a promising and new class of the photothermal conversion material, in which the donor and acceptor can be regulated to control the energy gap,...
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