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Benzene exhibits a rich photochemistry which can provide access to complex molecular scaffolds that are difficult to access with reactions in the electronic ground state. While benzene is aromatic in its ground state, it is antiaromatic in its lowest ππ* excited states. Herein, we clarify to what extent relief of excited-state antiaromaticity (ESAA) triggers a fundamental benzene photoreaction: the photoinitiated nucleophilic addition of solvent to benzene in acidic media leading to substituted bicyclo[3.1.0]hex-2-enes. The reaction scope was probed experimentally, and it was found that silyl-substituted benzenes provide the most rapid access to bicyclo[3.1.0]hexene derivatives, formed as single isomers with three stereogenic centers in yields up to 75% in one step. Two major mechanism hypotheses, both involving ESAA relief, were explored through quantum chemical calculations and experiments. The first mechanism involves protonation of excited-state benzene and subsequent rearrangement to bicyclo[3.1.0]hexenium cation, trapped by a nucleophile, while the second involves photorearrangement of benzene to benzvalene followed by protonation and nucleophilic addition. Our studies reveal that the second mechanism is operative. We also clarify that similar ESAA relief leads to puckering of S-state silabenzene and pyridinium ion, where the photorearrangement of the latter is of established synthetic utility. Finally, we identified causes for the limitations of the reaction, information that should be valuable in explorations of similar photoreactions. Taken together, we reveal how the ESAA in benzene and 6π-electron heterocycles trigger photochemical distortions that provide access to complex three-dimensional molecular scaffolds from simple reactants.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.9b13769 | DOI Listing |
Chem Asian J
September 2025
Department of Chemical Sciences, Bose Institute, Unified Academic Campus, Kolkata, West Bengal, 700091, India.
This article reports a comprehensive theoretical analysis of the dual fluorescence property of three derivatives of p-amino o-hydroxy benzaldehyde molecules, namely, para-N,N-dimethylamino orthohydroxy benzaldehyde (tertiary PAOHBA), para-N-methylamino orthohydroxy benzaldehyde (secondary PAOHBA), and para-amino orthohydroxy benzaldehyde (primary PAOHBA) through ab initio calculations and excited state molecular dynamics. The results revealed that excited-state intramolecular proton transfer is responsible for the dual emission properties of such molecules. The conclusions are made based on the computed vibrational frequencies, excited state antiaromaticity, potential energy surfaces, absorption and emission spectra, and finally, from the excited state dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemistry (Basel)
June 2025
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306, USA.
This review focuses on photocyclization reactions involving alkenes and arenes. Photochemistry opens up synthetic opportunities difficult for thermal methods, using light as a versatile tool to convert stable ground-state molecules into their reactive excited counterparts. This difference can be particularly striking for aromatic molecules, which, according to Baird's rule, transform from highly stable entities into their antiaromatic "evil twins".
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Chem
August 2025
Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Leading strategies for the capture of CO from point sources and directly from the atmosphere face high energy costs for thermal sorbent regeneration. Photochemical processes, driven by sunlight as the sole external stimulus, offer a promising alternative. Despite many reported examples of light-induced pH swings using metastable photoacids, the complementary mode of operation, using photoswitchable bases, has not been extensively considered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
September 2025
Institute of Organic Chemistry, RWTH Aachen University, 52074 Aachen, Germany.
By means of DFT and multiconfigurational simulations, this work showcases the potential ability of photoactive amine-boranes to undergo transfer hydrogenation for the reduction of unsaturated compounds. Following absorption of UV-A light, the model amine-borane populates a low-lying triplet state. Then, the reduction of carbon-carbon double bonds proceeds through low activation barriers, one order of magnitude lower than those in the electronic ground state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Org Chem
July 2025
Department of Chemistry - Ångström, Uppsala University, 751 20 Uppsala, Sweden.
The photochemistry of heteroaromatic compounds depends on the character of their lowest electronically excited states, which are of either ,π* or π,π* type. For species with 4 + 2 π-electrons, the latter type of states can be antiaromatic to various extents according to Baird's rule and, thus, highly reactive. The ,π* type of states, on the other hand, will have an odd number of π-electrons leading to an unclear character, spanning from aromatic to antiaromatic.
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