Picosecond to millisecond tracking of a photocatalytic decarboxylation reaction provides direct mechanistic insights

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DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13154-w
Reference A. Bhattacherje, M. Sneha, L. Lewis-Borrell, O. Tau, I.P. Clarck and A.J. Orr-Ewing, Picosecond to millisecond tracking of a photocatalytic decarboxylation reaction provides direct mechanistic insights, Nature Commun. 10, (1), 5152: 1-7 (2019)

The photochemical decarboxylation of carboxylic acids is a versatile route to free radical intermediates for chemical synthesis. However, the sequential nature of this multi-step reaction renders the mechanism challenging to probe. Here, we employ a 100 kHz mid-infrared probe in a transient absorption spectroscopy experiment to track the decarboxylation of cyclohexanecarboxylic acid in acetonitrile-d3 over picosecond to millisecond timescales using a photooxidant pair (phenanthrene and 1,4-dicyanobenzene). Selective excitation of phenanthrene at 256 nm enables a diffusion-limited photoinduced electron transfer to 1,4-dicyanobenzene. A measured time offset in the rise of the CO2 byproduct reports on the lifetime (520 ± 120 ns) of a reactive carboxyl radical in solution, and spectroscopic observation of the carboxyl radical confirm its formation as a reaction intermediate. Precise clocking of the lifetimes of radicals generated in situ by an activated C-C bond fission will pave the way for improving the photocatalytic selectivity and turnover.