Abstract:We have investigated novel bicyclic
diene molecular solar thermal
energy storage systems that presently are the ones with the highest
predicted energy density. Using a variety of different ab initio quantum
chemical methods, we report storage energies, absorption spectra,
and reaction barriers for the release of stored energy for a series
of bicyclic dienes. The bicyclic dienes are all constructed by modifying
the bridgehead of the well-known norbornadiene/quadricyclane (NBD/QC)
system. In conclusion, we find … Show more
“…1–12 An ideal photoswitching molecule forms a metastable isomer upon irradiation and converts back to the stable parent compound either thermally, electrochemically or with an aid of a catalyst. 13–16 The two photo-isomers of the molecular photochromic couple have different physical and chemical properties. 17,18 Therefore, light acts as an exceptional external stimulus that enables precise photochemical control of the properties of systems like drug and protein targets, peptide conformation, nucleotides, drug delivery systems, etc.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1,7,12,15,27,35,40,44,47–49 Numerous attempts have also been made by Mikkelsen and co-workers to tune the properties of different molecular photoswitches in the theoretical studies. 13–15,31–34,43,45,48,50–54…”
The scrutiny of molecular photoswitches has received utmost attention owing to their plethora of promising applications. Bicyclooctadiene/Tetracyclooctane (BOD/TCO) couple is recently recognized as a suitable photoswitching system for molecular solar...
“…1–12 An ideal photoswitching molecule forms a metastable isomer upon irradiation and converts back to the stable parent compound either thermally, electrochemically or with an aid of a catalyst. 13–16 The two photo-isomers of the molecular photochromic couple have different physical and chemical properties. 17,18 Therefore, light acts as an exceptional external stimulus that enables precise photochemical control of the properties of systems like drug and protein targets, peptide conformation, nucleotides, drug delivery systems, etc.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1,7,12,15,27,35,40,44,47–49 Numerous attempts have also been made by Mikkelsen and co-workers to tune the properties of different molecular photoswitches in the theoretical studies. 13–15,31–34,43,45,48,50–54…”
The scrutiny of molecular photoswitches has received utmost attention owing to their plethora of promising applications. Bicyclooctadiene/Tetracyclooctane (BOD/TCO) couple is recently recognized as a suitable photoswitching system for molecular solar...
“…Interestingly, keeping the potential usefulness of QC in solar energy applications, five decades after the initial report of QC production by triplet sensitization of NBD (10) a patent was issued for large-scale preparation QC via Michler's ketone sensitized synthesis from NBD in 2004 (27). After a gap of more than two decades, interest in this system has had a recent resurgence (28)(29)(30)(31)(32)(33)(34)(35)(36)(37)(38)(39). In addition to strain another unusual property of QC that has played an important role for energy storage and release is its low oxidation potential (0.91 V vs SCE) in comparison to NBD (1.54 V vs SCE) (40).…”
With the desire to develop a sustainable green method to store and release solar energy via a chemical reaction, we have examined the well-investigated norbornadienequadricyclane (NBD-QC) system in water. In this context, we have employed octa acid (OA) as the host that forms a capsule in water. According to 1 H NMR spectra and diffusion constants, OA forms a stable 2:2 complex with both NBD and QC and 1:1:2 mixed complex in the presence of equal amounts of both NBD and QC. The photoconversion of NBD to QC within the OA capsule is clean without side reactions. In this case, OA itself acts as a triplet sensitizer. Recognizing the disadvantage of this supramolecular approach, in the future we plan to look for visible light absorbing sensitizers to perform this conversion. The reverse reaction (QC to NBD) is achieved via electron transfer process with methylene blue as the sensitizer. This reverse reaction is also clean, and no side products were detected. The preliminary results reported here provide "proof of principle" for combining green, sustainable and supramolecular chemistries in the context of solar energy capture and release.
“…[7][8][9][10] CO delivery can be light-activated with a photoactive CO-releasing molecule (CORM). 11,12 Light enables spatiotemporal activation of different chemical processes, including energy storage in materials chemistry [13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24] and pro-drugs in drug delivery [25][26][27] . Strained cycloaddends (e.g., cyclooctynes and 1,3-dipoles) can be accessed using light through a class of biorthogonal reactions known as 'photoclick chemistry.'…”
Gas-evolving photochemical reactions use mild conditions to access strained organic compounds irreversibly. Cyclopropenones are a class of pseudo-aromatic light-responsive molecules used in bioorthogonal photoclick reactions; their excited-state decarbonylation reaction mechanisms are misunderstood due to their ultrafast (<100 femtosecond) lifetimes. We have combined state-of-the-art multiconfigurational quantum mechanical (QM) calculations and non-adiabatic molecular dynamics (NAMD) simulations to uncover the excited-state mechanism of cyclopropene and a photoprotected cyclooctyne-(COT)-precursor in gaseous and explicit aqueous environments. We explore the role of H-bonding with unprecedented QM/QM NAMD simulations (CAS-chromophore and HF-solvent) for the aqueous decarbonylation reaction. The cyclopropenones pass through asynchronous conical intersections but have dynamically concerted photodecarbonylation mechanisms. The cyclopropenones break planarity to relieve the S1 pseudo anti-aromaticity upon photoexcitation. The substantial structural distortions relieve pseudo anti-aromaticity towards non-aromatic structures and release inherent ring strain. After crossing to S0-state, the cyclopropenones maximize pseudo-aromaticities by reverting to the reactant or the second σCC bond breaks to form CO and an alkyne. The COT-precursor has a higher quantum yield of (53%) than cyclopropenone (28%) because these trajectories prefer to directly break a σCC bond to avoid the strained trans-cyclooctene S1-minimum geometry. Our QM/QM simulations show an increased quantum yield (58%) for the systems studied here. Favorable ground-state hydrogen-bonding interactions become repulsive in the excited state due to developing positive charges on oxygen in the S1-state, resulting from the nO → 𝜋* excitation.
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