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Qubit Coherence Noise Stability Characterization

Photoredox Product Selectivity Controlled by Persistent Radical Stability.

PubMed
Authors: Stevenson BG, Gironda C, Talbott E, Prascsak A, Burnett NL, Kompanijec V, Nakhamiyayev R, Fredin LA, Swierk JR

Year

2024

Paper ID

1022

Status

Peer-reviewed

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

189

Citations

5

Abstract

The use of photoredox catalysis for the synthesis of small organic molecules relies on harnessing and converting the energy in visible light to drive reactions. Specifically, photon energy is used to generate radical ion species that can be harnessed through subsequent reaction steps to form a desired product. Cyanoarenes are widely used as arylating agents in photoredox catalysis because of their stability as persistent radical anions. However, there are marked, unexplained variations in product yields when using different cyanoarenes. In this study, the quantum yield and product yield of an α-aminoarylation photoredox reaction between five cyanoarene coupling partners and -phenylpyrrolidine were characterized. Significant discrepancies in cyanoarene consumption and product yield suggested a chemically irreversible, unproductive pathway in the reaction. Analysis of the side products in the reaction demonstrated the formation of species consistent with radical anion fragmentation. Electrochemical and computational methods were used to study the fragmentation of the different cyanoarenes and revealed a correlation between product yield and cyanoarene radical anion stability. Kinetic modeling of the reaction demonstrates that cross-coupling selectivity between -phenylpyrrolidine and the cyanoarene is controlled by the same phenomenon present in the persistent radical effect.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Qubit Coherence, Noise & Stability Characterization research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2024 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • The use of photoredox catalysis for the synthesis of small organic molecules relies on harnessing and converting the energy in visible light to drive reactions.

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