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Generating Hydrated Electrons for Chemical Syntheses by Using a Green Light‐Emitting Diode (LED)

65

Citations

25

References

2017

Year

Abstract

Abstract We present the first working system for accessing and utilizing laboratory‐scale concentrations of hydrated electrons by photoredox catalysis with a green light‐emitting diode (LED). Decisive are micellar compartmentalization and photon pooling in an intermediate that decays with second‐order kinetics. The only consumable is the nontoxic and bioavailable vitamin C. A turnover number of 1380 shows the LED method to be on par with electron generation by high‐power pulsed lasers, but at a fraction of the cost. The extreme reducing power of the electron and its long unquenched life as a ground‐state species are synergistic. We demonstrate the applicability to the dechlorination, defluorination, and hydrogenation of compounds that are inert towards all other visible‐light photoredox catalysts known to date. A comprehensive mechanistic investigation from microseconds to hours yields results of general validity for photoredox catalysis with photon pooling, allowing optimization and upscaling.

References

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