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Sunscreens protect skin against sunburn. However, studies have demonstrated that UV-irradiated sunscreen components such as titanium dioxide (TiO2) promote the photogeneration of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Because encapsulation of TiO2 within zeolites alters its photocatalytic activity, supramolecular composites based on NaY zeolite hosts containing TiO2 guests were prepared, and the effects on ROS formation in cells under UVA-irradiation evaluated. DCFH-DA (2′,7′-dichlorofluorescein diacetate) was used as a profluorescent probe to monitor intracellular ROS. The detection of intracellular 2′,7′-dichlorofluorescein (DCF) fluorescence by confocal microscopy revealed that DCFH-DA was taken up, hydrolyzed and oxidized by yeast cells and cultured human skin fibroblasts within 20 and 6 min, respectively. Higher DCF fluorescence was observed in fibroblasts following UVA irradiation in the absence but not in the presence of the radical nitroxide, TEMPOL (4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperydine-1-oxyl), which exhibits superoxide dismutase-mimetic and catalase-mimetic activity. UVA-induced fluorescence increased by ∼50% in the presence of 32-nm anatase TiO2 particles and decreased by essentially an equal amount in the presence of TiO2 encapsulated within NaY zeolites (TiO2@NaY). Addition of the uncomplexed NaY host also decreased (by ∼30%) the amount of UVA-induced fluorescence but, unexpectedly, the combination of the free guest and host (TiO2 NaY) caused a doubling of the fluorescence. Protection of cells against TiO2-induced intracellular ROS by encapsulation suggests that supramolecular species may be beneficial in photoprotection of the skin. In contrast, the potentiation of TiO2-induced ROS by uncomplexed NaY points to a critical role for formulation when free TiO2 is used as a sun screen ingredient.
The photodegradation of the S( )- and R(−)-ketoprofen (KP) enantiomers in the bovine serum albumin matrix was studied by steady-state photolysis with the use of λirr > 320 nm and transient absorption spectroscopy with λexc = 355 nm, at 1/1 and 2/1 KP/BSA molar ratios. R(−)-KP was found to be more labile than S( ). Triplet ketoprofen species were evidenced with lifetimes of 400 ns for S( ) and 600 ns for R(−)-KP. Further longer-lived transients with lifetimes of 2.6 and 6.0 μs for S( ) and R(−), respectively, were detected. On the basis of the binding constants of the drug enantiomers to the two main binding sites of the protein, obtained from circular dichroism experiments, the individual disappearance quantum yields of the 1:1 and 2:1 diastereomeric KP:BSA complexes could be estimated. The photoreactivity in the BSA matrix was rationalized on the basis of diastereoselective photodecarboxylation in the two main protein sites.
The binding properties of two anthracene derivatives with calf thymus DNA (CT DNA), poly(dA-dT), and poly(dG)·poly(dC) are reported. One contained bulky, cyclic cationic substituents at the 9 and 10 positions, and the other carried acylic, branched, cationic substituents. Binding of the probes to the DNA was examined by calorimetry, spectroscopy and helix melting studies. The cyclic derivative indicated exothermic binding, strong hypochromism, bathochromism, positive induced circular dichroism (CD, 300–400 nm), significant unwinding of the helix, large increases in the helix melting temperature, strong but negative linear dichroism (LD, 300–400 nm) and considerable stabilization of the helix. In contrast, the acyclic analog indicated thermoneutral binding, smaller hypochromism, no bathochromism, very weak induced CD, and no change in the helix melting temperature with any of the DNA polymers. A sharp distinction between the binding properties of the two probes is indicated, and both have intrinsic binding constants of ∼106M−1 for the three polymers. However, when the ionic strength of the medium was lowered (10 mM NaCl), the absorption as well as CD spectral changes associated with the binding of the acyclic derivative corresponded with those of the cyclic derivative. The acyclic derivative showed large preference (10-fold) for poly(dG)·poly(dC) over poly(dA-dT), whereas the cyclic analog showed no preference. The characteristic spectroscopic signatures of the two distinct binding modes of these probes will be helpful in deciphering the interaction of other anthracene derivatives with DNA.
The photochemistry and photophysics of several psoralens and coumarins have been examined in human serum albumin (HSA) complexes and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) vesicles. Fluorescence spectroscopy indicates that there are multiple binding sites with polarities that are intermediate between those of acetonitrile and water for the substrates complexed to HSA. In the case of the 6,7-dimethoxycoumarin-HSA complex, laser flash photolysis experiments provide evidence for the formation of radical cation in addition to triplet. Radical cations are not detected for other coumarin-HSA complexes, either due to a lower yield of formation or to rapid reaction of an initial radical cation with adjacent amino acids. Fluorescence spectra for coumarins indicate that they are primarily solubilized in the polar headgroup region in DMPC vesicles. Consistent with this, radical cations generated by photoionization are detected in transient experiments. For dimethoxycoumarins the radical cation is long-lived, indicating rapid exit from the vesicle and decay in the aqueous phase. However, 4,5′,8-trimethylpsoralen and 7-ethoxy-4-hexadecylcoumarin radical cations are much shorter-lived, presumably due to rapid decay by electron recombination in the vesicle. The results for both HSA complexes and vesicles indicate that radical ions may play a role in psoralen and coumarin photochemistry in a cellular environment.
Spin-exchange quenching of α-methylstilbene triplets by molecular oxygen and by the free radical di-tert-butyl nitroxide is shown to favor the cis isomer more than does natural decay. The effect of the two quenching events is an identical 7% decrease in the fraction of perpendicular triplets that decay to the trans isomer. The conclusion that relaxed stilbene triplets reside in a shallow minimum corresponding to a geometry in which the two benzyl moieties are orthogonal was based on the observation that their quenching by O2 does not alter the trans/cis photostationary ratio. Our results with α-methylstilbene confirm the hypothesis that in the case of stilbene spin exchange quenching by O2 at the twisted geometry favors the cis isomer but occurs in competition with excitation transfer from transoid triplets that leads to the trans isomer and to singlet oxygen. The opposite effects of the two oxygen quenching paths on stilbene isomer composition cancel accidentally leading to an overall insensitivity of benzophenone-sensitized photostationary states to the presence of oxygen. Quenching rate constants derived on the basis of this cancellation are close to diffusion-controlled and predict singlet O2 quantum yields of 0.08 and 0.13 in the presence of air and under an O2 atmosphere, in good agreement with experimental measurements.
Three Eu(III) luminescent compounds were separately entrapped in a xerogel porous silica matrix and finely ground particles of it were deposited on a glass support with polyvinylacetate (PVAc) as a binder to build a thin film sensor. These 3 devices were immersed in aqueous solutions of Cu(II) and the content of this metal was evaluated by emission-quenching experiments. The sensor containing the highly luminescent antenna chelate of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (dtpa) sensitized with Coumarin120 rendered the largest Stern-Volmer constant (KSV = 1.49 × 104M−1), showing no leaching of the Eu(III) complex to the aqueous solution and a reproducible value of the luminescence ratio between water and Cu(II) solution. The in situ sensor we developed can measure the concentration of Cu(II) in aqueous media down to the ppm level by emission-quenching experiments. This methodology permits a simple calibration of the sensor and an easy to use reusable device.
The photosolvolysis of several biphenyl methanols (Ph-PhCH[Ph]OH) substituted with hydroxy or methoxy groups on the benzene ring not containing the -CH(Ph)OH moiety has been studied in aqueous solution. This work is a continuation of our studies of photosolvolysis of hydroxy-substituted arylmethanols that generate quinone methide intermediates, some of which are known to be relevant intermediates in toxicology and in biological and organic chemistry in general. In this study, we further probe the ability of the biphenyl ring system to transmit charge from the ring substituted with a potential electron-donating group (hydroxy and methoxy) to the adjacent benzene ring that contains a labile benzyl alcohol moiety. We show that in systems with a hydroxy substituent, biphenyl quinone methides (BQM) are the first formed intermediates that are detectable by nanosecond laser flash photolysis, and are responsible for the observed overall photosolvolysis reaction of these compounds. The highly conjugated BQM are found to absorb at long wavelengths (λmax 580 and ∼750 nm for the p,p′ and o,p′-isomers, respectively) with relatively long lifetimes in neutral aqueous solution (500 and 30 μs, respectively). The BQM from the o,p′-isomer was found to undergo a competing intramolecular Friedel–Crafts alkylation, to give a fluorene derivative.
Absorption spectra of four nickel(II) complexes with poly(pyrazolyl)methane ligands are presented in the NIR-VIS-UV region and the band system corresponding to the lowest-energy spin-allowed and spin-forbidden transitions is analyzed. A quantitative theoretical model involving coupled electronic states provides precise energies for the lowest-energy triplet and singlet excited states and allows comparisons between complexes with a variable number of nitrogen and oxygen ligator atoms. Singlet energies between 12 840 and 13 000 cm−1 are determined for heteroleptic complexes. These energies are in an intermediate range between those for homoleptic complexes with either nitrogen or oxygen ligator atoms with singlet states at approximately 12 000 and 14 000 cm−1, respectively. The new theoretical approach is compared to the traditional ligand-field parameters obtained from the maxima of the broad, spin-allowed absorption bands.
The binding of the photosensitizing fluoroquinolone (FQ) antibiotic norfloxacin (NX) to sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles and the photoreactivity of the NX/SDS complex under physiological pH conditions are investigated by means of absorption and emission spectroscopy, steady-state and laser flash photolysis. It is shown that the photolabile zwitterionic form of NX, which is dominant at physiological pH, is not the most abundant species in the presence of SDS micelles. This medium exhibits a high preference for the cationic form of the drug, which is selectively and successfully entrapped within the micellar cage (Kass = 6 × 104M−1 ± 3000), becoming the largely dominant species at neutral pH. The effect of this trapping is drastically reflected on both efficiency and nature of the drug photodecomposition. It is observed that the photostability of NX incorporated in the micellar pseudophase increases of more than one order of magnitude if compared to that of the “free” drug. Furthermore, the radical photodecomposition mechanism occurring in phosphate buffered solution is suppressed by the micellar medium and the low photodegradation observed seems to take place preferentially through an ionic pathway. Hopefully, the results presented herein may contribute to a better understanding of the bio-distribution of NX in biological systems and provide helpful and stimulating information in order to get the control of FQ photoreactivity under physiological pH conditions.
The effects of dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) on the photoreactions of 1,4-benzoquinone (BQ), 1,4-naphthoquinone (NQ), 9,10-anthraquinone (AQ) and several derivatives in acetonitrile/water were studied. The observed triplet state of the quinones is quenched and the rate constant is close to the diffusion-controlled limit for reactions of most quinones with DMS and lower with DMSO. Semiquinone radical anions (Q·−) produced by electron transfer from sulfur to the triplet quinone were detected. For both DMS and DMSO the yield of Q·− is similar, being generally low for BQ and NQ, substantial for AQ and largest for chloranil. The specific quencher concentrations and the effects of quinone structure and redox potentials on the time-resolved photochemical properties are discussed.
Xanthones with amino substituents were synthesized to diminish the photoreactivity of the xanthone chromophore with DNA, with the objective of using these molecules to study their binding dynamics with DNA. The aminoxanthones showed a strong solvatochromic effect on their singlet and triplet excited-state photophysics, where polar solvents led to a decrease of the energies for the excited states. Quenching of the triplet excited states by nitrite anions was used to determine the binding dynamics, and a residence time in the microsecond time domain was estimated for the bound 2-aminoxanthone with DNA. The quenching experiments performed showed that this methodology will not be applicable to study the binding dynamics of a wide variety of guests with DNA.
The photophysical parameters controlling the cleavage process of 2-hydroxy-2,2-dimethylacetophenone (HDMA) were investigated in detail. Time-resolved picosecond absorption experiments show that the formation of the triplet state occurs within 20 ps after excitation and decays within hundreds of picoseconds depending on the solvent polarity. Molecular modeling reveals that three stable conformations exist in the ground state, the most stable one exhibiting an intramolecular hydrogen bond that modifies the electronic properties of the molecule. This explains quite well the steady-state absorption properties. The conformation of the most stable triplet state is twisted by 180° with respect to the ground state. Computation of the potential energy surface along the molecular coordinate for the dissociation reaction evidences an electronic state crossing yielding a final σσ* state, in perfect agreement with the state correlation diagram. Optimization of the transition state allows the calculation of the activation energy and the use of the transition-state theory leads to an estimate of 100 ps for the cleavage process in the gas phase. Single-point energy calculations using a solvent model predict an increase of the dissociation rate constant with the increase of the solvent polarity, in good agreement with the value deduced from kinetic measurements.
Experiments were performed to elucidate the excited-state behavior of 9-phenylphenalenones, which are phototoxic plant secondary metabolites involved in mechanisms of light-mediated plant defense. Using a combination of time-resolved and steady-state UV/visible spectroscopies, time-resolved IR absorption spectroscopy, time-resolved singlet oxygen phosphorescence measurements and cyclic voltammetry, we provide evidence of an intramolecular charge-transfer process in the excited singlet and the triplet states of 9-phenylphenalenones that modulates the photosensitized production of singlet oxygen.
Accurate oxidation potentials for organic compounds are critical for the evaluation of thermodynamic and kinetic properties of their radical cations. Except when using a specialized apparatus, electrochemical oxidation of molecules with reactive radical cations is usually an irreversible process, providing peak potentials, Ep, rather than thermodynamically meaningful oxidation potentials, Eox. In a previous study on amines with radical cations that underwent rapid decarboxylation, we estimated Eox by correcting the Ep from cyclic voltammetry with rate constants for decarboxylation obtained using laser flash photolysis. Here we use redox equilibration experiments to determine accurate relative oxidation potentials for the same amines. We also describe an extension of these experiments to show how relative oxidation potentials can be obtained in the absence of equilibrium, from a complete kinetic analysis of the reversible redox kinetics. The results provide support for the previous cyclic voltammetry/laser flash photolysis method for determining oxidation potentials.
Oxidation of oximes via photosensitized electron transfer (PET) results in the formation of the corresponding ketones as the major product via oxime radical cations and iminoxyl radicals. The influence of electron-releasing and electron-accepting substituents on these reactions was studied. The observed substituent effect strongly supports formation of iminoxyl radicals from the oximes via an electron transfer–proton transfer sequence rather than direct hydrogen atom abstraction. Correlation of the relative conversion of the oximes with Hammett parameters shows that radical effects dominate for the meta-substituted acetophenone oximes (ρrad/ρpol = 5.4; r2 = 0.93), whereas the para-substituted oximes are influenced almost equally by radical and ionic effects (ρrad/ρpol = −1.1; r2 = 0.98). From these data sets we conclude that the follow-up reactions proceed through a number of intermediates with both radical and ionic character. This was confirmed by product studies with the use of an isotopically labeled nucleophile. In addition to the major oxidation product (ketone), a chlorine-containing product was often identified as well. Studies on the formation of this product show that the most likely pathway is either via a direct nucleophilic addition in a complex formed between the oxime radical cation and the chloranil radical anion or via a radical substitution (SH2) mechanism. These studies show that with the increasing use of oximes as drugs and pesticides, intake of these chemicals followed by enzymatic oxidation may result in the formation of a variety of reactive intermediates, which may lead to cell and tissue damage.
The structure, spectroscopy and photochemical reactions of three symmetrical 2,6-diarylstyrenes (aryl = phenyl, 2-furyl and 2-thiophenyl) have been investigated. The ground-state structures are highly nonplanar, having large aryl-phenyl and vinyl-phenyl dihedral angles. All three diarylstyrenes have broad UV absorption bands attributed to allowed, delocalized π,π* (highest occupied molecular orbit–lowest unoccupied molecular orbit) transitions. The 2-furylstyrene is weakly fluorescent, with a large Stokes shift attributed to a change in geometry from the nonplanar ground state to a more planar singlet state. Irradiation in fluid solution results in efficient conversion of the diarylstyrenes to cyclized 9,10-dihydrophenanthrene and 4,5-dihydronaphthofuran or thiophene products, thus extending the scope of the 2-vinylbiphenyl photocyclization reaction to heterocyclic analogs. Irradiation at low temperatures in glassy media permits observation of the UV absorption spectra of the unstable primary photoproducts. Upon warming of the glass, these intermediates undergo rapid hydrogen migration to form the stable dihydroarene products.
J. Sivaguru, Hideaki Saito, Marissa R. Solomon, Lakshmi S. Kaanumalle, Thomas Poon, Steffen Jockusch, Waldemar Adam, V. Ramamurthy, Yoshihisa Inoue, Nicholas J. Turro
On photooxygenation of the optically active Z/E enecarbamates 1 (X = i-Pr) and 2 (X = Me) equipped with the oxazolidinone chiral auxiliary in methylene-blue (MB)-incorporated, alkali-metal (M = Li, Na, K, Cs, Rb), exchanged Y-type zeolites (MY-MB), oxidative cleavage of the alkenyl functionality releases the enantiomerically enriched methyldesoxybenzoin (MDB) product. The extent (�) and/or the sense (R or S) of the stereoselectivity in the formation of the MDB product depends on the choice of the alkyl substiuent (i-Pr or Me) at the C-4 position of the oxazolidinone chiral auxiliary, the Z/E configuration of the alkene functionality in the enecarbamates, and the type of alkali metal in the zeolite. Most significantly—the highlight of this study—is the reversed sense (R or S) in the stereoselection when the photooxygenation is run in CDCl3 solution versus inside the MY-MB zeolite. As a mechanistic rationale for this novel stereochemical behavior, we propose the combined action of spatial confinement and metal-ion coordination (assessed by density-functional calculations) of the substrate within the zeolite supercage, both of which greatly reduce the freedom of the substrate and entropically manipulate the stereochemical outcome.
Pyrene has been a favorite photophysical probe molecule for zeolite research because of its ability to exhibit both monomer and excimer emission upon excitation. This study combines the use of ultrafast time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy with steady-state fluorescence spectroscopy to study the excimer emission of pyrene incorporated within zeolites LiY, NaY, KY and NaX. The effects of sealing technique and coincorporated solvents are also explored. Pyrene excimer emission is resolvable with the use of an ultrafast streak camera under all conditions examined in this study with a rise-time range of 6.8 to 16.0 picoseconds. For each zeolite sample the addition of cosolvents decreases the rise time, with a greater decrease for polar solvents than for a nonpolar solvent. The presence of a detectable rise time for excimer emission indicates that pyrene excimer formation is a dynamic process when pyrene is embedded within the cavities of zeolite host materials.
Methanol-swollen Nafion beads were used as microreactors to control the photochemical reaction pathways. Product selectivity in three unimolecular reactions, namely, the photo-Fries rearrangement of naphthyl esters, Norrish Type I reaction of 1-phenyl-3-p-tolyl-propan-2-one and Norrish Type I and Type II reactions of benzoin alkyl ethers were examined. The influence of cations over the photodimerization of acenaphthylene and cross-photodimerization between acenaphthylene and N-benzyl maleimide included within Nafion were also examined. The photochemical behaviors of the above substrates were significantly altered within Nafion compared with their solution photochemistry. Of particular interest, the product distributions were found to depend on the counter cations of Nafion.
Recently we reported a chain-amplified photochemical reaction, initiated by electron transfer from an excited sensitizer to N-methoxypyridinium salts, which leads to N–O bond cleavage (26). Hydrogen atom abstraction by the methoxy radical from an alcohol yields an α-hydroxy radical, which reduces another N-methoxypyridinium molecule and propagates the chain. We now report that the chain amplification can be significantly enhanced in the presence of water. Detailed kinetic studies of the reaction of 4-cyano-N-methoxypyridinium salt (CMP) with benzhydrol (BH) showed that the rate constant for reduction of CMP by the diphenyl ketyl radical (1.1 × 106M−1 s−1) increases by more than an order of magnitude in the presence of water. This increase in the rate constant is the result of coupling of the electron transfer to a proton transfer from the ketyl radical to water, which decreases the endothermicity of the reaction. Unfortunately, this increase in the rate constant for one of the two propagation steps is accompanied by a larger increase in the rate constant(s) of the competing termination reaction(s) of the ketyl radical. The observed enhancement in chain amplification is the result of a significant increase in the ratio of propagation to termination rate constants of the reactions of the methoxy radical. The main chain-terminating reactions of the methoxy radical are deuterium abstraction from the solvent, CD3CN, and reaction with the sensitizer, thioxanthone. The effect of increase in the ratios of the propagation rate constant of the methoxy radical (hydrogen abstraction from BH) to those of both termination reactions is larger than the unfavorable effect of water on the reactions of the ketyl radical. The increase in chain amplification depends on the concentration of the reactants; at 0.037 M of both reactants, the quantum yield increases form ∼16 to ∼45 in the presence of <1% water. The reaction of 4-phenyl-N-methoxypyridinium (PMP) with 4-methoxybenzyl alcohol does not proceed via chain amplification because of large endothermicity for electron transfer from the α-hydroxy radical to the pyridinium salt. However, chain amplification could be induced, simply by addition of water, where at ∼10% water content, a quantum yield of ∼5 was obtained. Water-induced, proton-coupled electron transfer increases the rate constant for reduction of PMP from a negligible level to becoming the dominant path.
Two-photon excitation photodynamic therapy (TPE-PDT) is being developed as an improved treatment for retinal diseases. TPE-PDT has advantages over one-photon PDT, including lower collateral damage to healthy tissue and more precise delivery of PDT. As with one-photon PDT, there can be local photochemical depletion of oxygen during TPE-PDT. Here, we investigate model systems and live cells to measure local photosensitizer photobleaching and through it, infer local oxygen consumption in therapeutic volumes of the order 1 μm3. Multilamellar vesicles (MLV) and African green monkey kidney (CV-1) cells were used to study the TPE photobleaching dynamics of the photosensitizer, Verteporfin. It was found that in an oxygen-rich environment, photobleaching kinetics could not be modeled using a mono-exponential function, whereas in hypoxic conditions a mono-exponential decay was adequate to represent photobleaching. A biexponential was found to adequately model the oxygen-rich conditions and it is hypothesized that the fast part of the decay is oxygen-dependent, whereas the slower rate constant is largely oxygen-independent. Photobleaching recovery studies in the CV-1 cells support this hypothesis.
The two-photon photolysis of liquid CCl4 with 25 ps pulses of 266 nm light has been studied and compared with similar studies with high energy radiation. Both neutral and ionic species are produced from excited states and ionization. The emphasis of the study is on the ionic processes, while some data related to excited states and free radicals are presented. In both radiolysis and photolysis, a solvent separated charged pair, CCl3‖Cl−, exhibiting a λmax at 475 nm, is observed that exhibits a total growth over 38 to 100 ps. Solutes with ionization potentials less than that of CCl4 (11.47 eV) reduce the yield of the 475 nm species producing radical cations of the solute. The efficiency of this process is about 10-fold larger in radiolysis compared with photolysis. Analysis of the data suggest that the lower energy of two-photon photolysis produces a charge pair CCl4‖CCl4−, which decays in about 3 ps to CCl4‖Cl−. This species then decays to CCl3‖Cl−. The lifetime of the growth of the 475 nm is measured as 46 ps. These studies clearly show areas where radiolysis and photolysis can be quite similar and also areas where the vast difference in excitation energy introduces stark differences in the observed radiation and photoinduced chemistry.
Photo-Fries rearrangements of 4-dodecylphenyl phenylacetate have been investigated in polyethylene films with 0–71% crystallinity and in hexane over a range of temperatures. The results are compared to those reported previously from phenyl phenylacetate and 1-naphthyl tetradecanoate to assess the influence of a long alkyl chain on the in-cage motions of the intermediate singlet radical pairs. It is demonstrated that the reactivity and selectivity of intimate singlet radical pairs can be tuned by judicious placement of long-chain substituents and selection of a specific polyethylene type as the reaction matrix.
The luminescence spectroscopy study and the determination of the photophysical parameters for the M-M′-bonded rhodium meso-tetraphenylporphyrin-tin(2,3,7,13,17,18-hexamethyl-8,12-diethylcorrole) complex, (TPP)Rh-Sn(Me6Et2Cor) 1, was investigated. The emission bands as well as the lifetimes (τe) and the quantum yields (Φe; at 77 K using 2MeTHF as solvent) were compared with those of (TPP)RhI 2 (TPP = tetraphenylporphyrin) and (Me6Et2Cor)SnCl 3 (Me6Et2Cor = 2,3,7,13,17,18-hexamethyl-8,12-diethylcorrole) which are the two chemical precursors of 1. The energy diagram has been established from the absorption, fluorescence and phosphorescence spectra. The Rh(TPP) and Sn(Me6Et2Cor) chromophores are the energy donor (D) and acceptor (A), respectively. The total absence of fluorescence in 1 (while fluorescence is observed in the tin derivative 3) indicates efficient excited state deactivation, presumably due to heavy atom effect and intramolecular energy transfer (ET). The large decreases in τP and ΦP of the Rh(TPP) chromophore going from 2 to 1 indicate a significant intramolecular ET in the triplet states of 1 with an estimated rate ranging between 106 and 108 s−1. Based on the comparison of transfer rates with other related dyads that exhibit similar D-A separations and no M-M′ bond, and for which slower through space ET processes (102–103 s−1) operate, a through M-M′ bond ET has been unambiguously assigned to 1.
Singlet molecular oxygen, a1Δg, can be detected from a single cell by its weak 1270 nm phosphorescence (a1Δg→X3Σg−) upon irradiation of the photosensitizer 5,10,15,20-tetrakis(N-methyl-4-pyridyl)-21H,23H-porphine (TMPyP) incorporated into the cell. The behavior of this sensitizer in a cell, and hence the behavior of the associated singlet oxygen phosphorescence signal, depends on the conditions under which the sample is exposed to light. Upon irradiation of a neuron freshly incubated with TMPyP, the intensity of TMPyP fluorescence initially increases and there is a concomitant increase in the singlet oxygen phosphorescence intensity from the cell. These results appear to reflect a photoinduced release of TMPyP bound to DNA in the nucleus of the cell, where TMPyP tends to localize, and the subsequent relocalization of TMPyP to a different microenvironment in the cell. Upon prolonged irradiation of the cell, TMPyP photobleaches and there is a corresponding decrease in the singlet oxygen phosphorescence intensity from the cell. The data reported herein provide insight into key factors that can influence photosensitized singlet oxygen experiments performed on biological samples.
Ionic liquids are suitable media which stabilize charged intermediates favoring those mechanisms that occur through charge separation. We have used ionic liquids to develop a photocatalytic system to perform the reduction of a carbonyl group to alcohol, thus mimicking the behavior of the reductase enzymes. The photochemical cycle is based on the well-known electron transfer from the Ru(bpy)32 complex in its excited state, acting as electron donor to MV2 , which acts as electron acceptor. The initial electron transfer process can be promoted upon selective Ru(bpy)32 excitation by visible light. By means of laser flash photolysis we have provided evidence of the nature and lifetimes of the intermediates involved in the photocatalytic system. Thus, the initial electron transfer between Ru(bpy)32 triplets and viologen MV2 forms the MV• radical cation, which upon accepting an H· atom from a suitable hydrogen atom donor, forms the corresponding dihydropyridine MVH reducing agent.
Products of riboflavin-mediated photosensitization of 2′-deoxyguanosine (dG) and thymidylyl-(3′-5′)-2′-deoxyguanosine (TpdG) by 350-nm light in oxygen-saturated aqueous solution have been isolated and identified as 1-(2-deoxy-β-d-erythro-pentofuranosyl) oxaluric acid (β-dOx) and thymidylyl-(3′-5′)-1-(2-deoxy-β-d-erythro-pentofuranosyl) oxaluric acid (Tpβ-dOx), respectively. In aqueous solution the modified β-deoxyribonucleoside is slowly converted to the α-anomer, generating α-dOx and Tpα-dOx. These modified nucleosides and dinucleoside monophosphates have been isolated by HPLC and characterized by proton and carbon NMR spectroscopy, fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry, and enzymatic analyses. Both α-dOx and Tpα-dOx slowly convert back into the modified β-deoxyribonucleoside, indicating that the furanosidic anomers are in dynamic equilibrium. Relative to TpdG, the rate of hydrolysis of Tpβ-dOx and Tpα-dOx by spleen phosphodiesterase is greatly reduced. Hot piperidine (1.0 M, 90°C, 30 min) destroys Tpβ-dOx and Tpα-dOx. Riboflavin-mediated photosensitization of TpdG in D2O instead of H2O has no detectable effect on the yield of Tpβ-dOx, suggesting that oxaluric acid is generated through a Type-I reaction mechanism, likely through the intermediary on initially generated 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine.
Absorption and fluorescence properties of methylene blue (MB), a well-known singlet molecular oxygen photosensitizer, and its mixtures with pheophorbide-a (Pheo) sorbed on microgranular cellulose are studied, with emphasis on radiative and nonradiative energy transfer from Pheo to MB. Although pure MB builds up dimeric species on cellulose even at 2 × 10−8 mol g−1, addition of 2.05 × 10−7 mol g−1 Pheo largely inhibits aggregation up to nearly 10−6 mol g−1 MB. At the same time, the absorption spectrum of monomeric MB in the presence of Pheo differs from the spectrum in pure cellulose. Both effects reveal a strong influence of Pheo on the medium properties. A model relying entirely on experimental data is developed, through which energy transfer efficiencies can be calculated for thin and thick layers of dye-loaded cellulose. At the largest concentration of MB assuring no dye aggregation, nonradiative energy transfer efficiencies reach a maximum value of nearly 40%. This value is quite high, taking into account the low fluorescence quantum yield of Pheo, Φ = 0.21, and results from the existence of high local concentrations of the acceptor within the supporting material. These results show that large energy transfer rates can exist in a system devoid of any special molecular organization.
The photo-Fenton reaction (Fe2 /Fe3 , H2O2, UV light) is strongly inhibited by high concentrations of added chloride ion. In this work, the effect of added chloride ion on the photocatalytic step that converts Fe(III) back to Fe(II) is studied by nanosecond laser flash photolysis over a wide range of pH (1.0–3.3) and concentrations of Fe(III) (0.1–1.0 mM) and chloride ion (0.05–0.75 M). An explicit mechanistic model based on the preferential formation of the less-reactive Cl2·− radical anion via two routes (competitive photolysis of the iron(III)-chloride complex to chlorine atoms instead of the desired hydroxyl radical and pH-dependent scavenging of the hydroxyl radical by chloride ion) is proposed. This model, which fits the laser flash photolysis data for the production and decay of Cl2·− over the entire range of conditions investigated, suggests that inhibition of the photocatalytic step of the photo-Fenton process in the presence of chloride ion can be circumvented by maintaining the pH of the medium at or slightly above 3.0 throughout the reaction.
The photochemistry of Ru(bpy)3 2 in the presence of amines was investigated in water by laser flash photolysis. N,N′-Dimethylaniline and p-phenylenediamine quench the luminescent metal to ligand charge transfer (MLCT) excited state of the complex by an electron transfer reaction that produces the semireduced form Ru(bpy)3 in relatively high yields. On the other hand, triethylamine (TEA) and aniline do not quench the MLCT. Nevertheless, when laser flash irradiation at 532 nm is carried out in the presence of these amines, the formation of Ru(bpy)3 is clearly detected by its transient absorption at 510 nm. These results are interpreted by an electron transfer reaction with the participation of a nonemitting excited state of the complex, formed independently of the MLCT from the Franck-Condon or the relaxed singlet excited state. The rate constants for the quenching of this state by TEA and aniline and the quantum yields for Ru(bpy)3 were determined. The new state is formed in a very fast process and has a lifetime of ca 4 μs in water.
A newly synthesized diethylene glycol functionalized chlorin-type photosensitizer, lemuteporfin, was characterized for use in photodynamic therapy (PDT) in a panel of in vitro and in vivo test systems. The photosensitizer was highly potent, killing cells at low nanomolar concentrations upon exposure to activating light. The cellular uptake of lemuteporfin was rapid, with maximum levels reached within 20 min. Mitogen-activated lymphoid cells accumulated more of the lemuteporfin than their quiescent equivalents, supporting selectivity. Photosensitizer fluorescence in the skin increased rapidly within the first few minutes following intravenous administration to mice, then decreased over the next 24 h. Skin photosensitivity reactions indicated rapid clearance of the photosensitizer. Intravenous doses as low as 1.4 μmol/kg combined with exposure to 50 J/cm2 red light suppressed tumor growth in a mouse model. In conclusion, this new benzoporphyrin was found to be an effective photosensitizer, showing rapid uptake and clearance both in vitro and in vivo. This rapid photosensitization of tumors could be useful in therapies requiring a potent, rapidly accumulating photosensitizer, while minimizing the potential for skin photosensitivity reactions to sunlight following treatment.
New evidence about the path followed in the photochemical reaction of 4-(2-nitrophenyl)-1,4-dihydropyridines such as the drugs nifedipine (Compound 1) and nisoldipine (Compound 2) to give the corresponding nitrosophenylpyridines has been found through determination of the steady-state photochemical parameters and a comparison of the photoreactions in solution and in matrix at 90 K. Additional support is given by comparison with the isomeric 4-(3-nitrophenyl)dihydropyridine as well as with simpler derivatives, such as the corresponding 4-methyldihydropyridine. In Compounds 1 and 2, the lowest lying singlet, localized on the dihydropyridine chromophore, is deactivated by (largely exothermic) electron transfer to the nitrobenzene moiety, as evidenced by the complete quenching of the blue fluorescence observed in analogues not containing the electron-accepting group. Intramolecular proton transfer ensues in the 2-nitrophenyl derivatives with a relatively medium-independent quantum yield of ∼0.3 and leads to an aromatic zwitterion, which is detected in matrix at 90 K (photoionization of this intermediate takes place in 2-methyltetrahydrofuran secondary). The intermediate is smoothly converted into the end product upon melting the glass. The 3-nitrophenyl analog, for which such a path is not available, is less reactive by about three orders of magnitude at 366 nm, although the quantum yield arrives at ∼0.01 by irradiation at 254 nm in MeOH, reasonably via the nitrophenyl localized triplet.
Drug-induced photoallergy requires as the first step formation of covalent drug-protein photoadducts. One of the key amino acids involved in this process is tryptophan (Trp). In this context, several diaryl ketones, including 2-benzoylthiophene (BT), [2-(5-benzoyl-5-thienyl)]-2-methylpropanoic methyl ester (TPA methyl ester) and 4-(2-thienylcarbonyl)phenyl]-2-methylpropanoic methyl ester (SUP methyl ester) have been irradiated in the presence of N-BOC-(L)-tryptophan methyl ester. Laser flash photolysis has allowed to detect three neutral radicals (ketyl, indolyl and skatolyl radicals) resulting from formal hydrogen-atom abstraction. This correlates well with the isolation of homodimers, as well as with cross-coupling products, in the preparative irradiation. The main cross-coupling products were in all cases lactones arising from the reaction of the Trp-derived skatolyl radicals with the corresponding ketyl radicals. These lactones were obtained as the (4R) stereoisomers with remarkable diasteroselectivity. No coupling products through the phenyl p-position of BT or TPA methyl ester were found. By contrast, ketone homodimers and cross-coupling products arising from reaction through the thienyl 5-position were obtained when using BT and SUP methyl ester; this is very interesting, because stable LAT-derived products are difficult to isolate.
Methylated analogues of cis-dichlorobis(1,10-phenanthroline)rhodium(III)chloride (BISPHEN) have been prepared in order to increase the hydrophobicity of the parent compound, and thus create octahedral rhodium (III) complexes suitable for use as anticancer and antiviral agents that can be photoactivated. The parent complex has been shown in earlier work to be unable to cross through cell membranes. Octamethylation, as in the case of cis-dichlorobis(3,4,7,8-tetramethyl-1,10-phenanthroline)rhodium(III)chloride (OCTBP), provides enough hydrophobicity to be taken up by KB tumor cells. It also provides a higher level of ground-state association with double-stranded DNA and increases the quantum efficiency of photoaquation by greater than 10-fold, relative to BISPHEN. OCTBP forms covalent bonds to deoxyguanosine when irradiated with the nucleoside, as has been seen with the parent complex. Irradiation of OCTBP in the presence of the KB or M109 tumor cell lines using narrow-band UVB (λ = 311 nm) irradiation initiates a considerable amount of phototoxicity. There is evidence that OCTBP acts as a prodrug (i.e. after passing through the cell membrane the metal complex is photolyzed to cis-chloro aquo OCTBP, which may be the active phototoxic agent). OCTBP and the tetramethyl analogue cis-dichlorobis(4,7-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline)rhodium(III)chloride (47TMBP) also show photoaquation upon excitation with visible light (λ > 500 nm), and indeed, some phototoxicity of KB cells is observed at these wavelengths as well. This is attributed to direct population of photoactive triplet-excited states. These results, together with our earlier studies of cis-dichloro[dipyrido(3,2-a: 2′,3′-c)phenazine (1,10-phenanthroline)rhodium(III)chloride (DPPZPHEN) demonstrate that such octahedral rhodium complexes are viable “photo-cisplatin” reagents.
Photoexcited phthalimide in equilibrium with its conjugated base produces the regioselective hydrophthalimidation of conjugated alkynes. The vinylphthalimide thus obtained is hydrolyzed to the corresponding carbonyl compound. With unconjugated alkynes, the outcome is a double addition of phthalimide to the triple bond. The reaction is assumed to take place via single electron transfer from either the alkyne or the phthalimide anion to the excited phthalimide as the primary photoprocess.
The photophysics and photochemistry of nalidixic acid (NA) were studied as function of pH and solvent properties. The ground state of NA exhibits different protonated forms in the range of pH 1.8–10.0. Fluorescence studies showed that the same species exist at the lowest singlet excited state. Absorption experiments were carried out with NA and with the methylated analog of nalidixic acid (MNE) in different organic solvents and water pH 3, where the main species corresponds to that protonated at the carboxylic group. These studies and the DFT calculation of torsional potential energy profiles suggest that the most stable conformation of the NA in nonprotic solvents corresponds to a closed structure caused by the existence of intramolecular hydrogen bond. Absorption and fluorescence spectra were studied in sulfuric acid solution. The pK value (Ho −1.0) found in these conditions was attributed to the protonation of the 4′ keto oxygen atom of the heterocyclic ring. Theoretical calculations (DFT/B3LYP/6-311G*) of the energies of the different monoprotonated forms of the NA and Fukui indexes (fx−) showed that the species with the proton attached to 4′ keto oxygen atom is the most stable of all the cationic forms. MNE and enoxacin also showed the protonation of the 4′ keto oxygen atom with similar pK values. The photodecomposition of NA is dependent on the medium properties. Faster decomposition rates were obtained in strong acid solution. In nonprotic solvents, a very slow decomposition rate was observed.
We describe experiments that determine the quenching kinetics by poly(ferrocenylsilane) (PFS) for platinum octaethylporphine (PtOEP) phosphorescence in toluene solution. The phosphorescence quenching process was interpreted in terms of diffusion-controlled kinetics. Pulsed-gradient spin-echo nuclear magnetic resonance (PGSE NMR) and dynamic light scattering (DLS) were used to characterize the diffusion behavior of PFS and PtOEP in toluene solution. We found that the ferrocene group present in the repeat unit of polymer backbone is a good quencher for PtOEP phosphorescence. Quenching by the polymer involves the entire PFS polymer chain instead of individual ferrocene groups. The intrinsic quenching ability of PFS was found to be higher than that of a model compound, Bu-FS, that contains a single ferrocene group.
The macrobicyclic molecule, 21-(9-anthrylmethyl)-4,17,13,16-tetraoxa-1,10,21-triazabicyclo [8.8.5]tricosane-19,23-dione, I, was designed, synthesized and characterized as a fluoroionophore for the selective, optical detection of lithium ions. Compound I is based on a bridged diazacrown structure, which provides a semirigid binding framework. Binding takes place by electrostatic interactions between the oxygen atoms of the crown and the cation and is transduced to fluorescence emission from an attached anthracene fluorophore. In a 75:25 dichloromethane/tetrahydrofuran solvent mixture, I acts as an intramolecular electron transfer “off–on” fluorescence switch, exhibiting a greater than 190-fold enhancement in fluorescence emission intensity in the presence of lithium ions. The relative selectivity of I for lithium ions over sodium, potassium and ammonium ions was found to be log KLi ,Na ∼ −3.36, log KLi ,K ∼ −1.77 and log KLi ,NH4 ∼ −2.78.
Carla Ferreri, Silvia Pierotti, Andrea Barbieri, Laura Zambonin, Laura Landi, Silvia Rasi, Pier Luigi Luisi, Francesco Barigelletti, Chryssostomos Chatgilialoglu
Glycerophosphatidylcholine containing trans-unsaturated fatty acid residues was prepared by reaction of the corresponding naturally occurring cis lipid with photochemically generated thiyl radicals. This modified lipid was chosen as the simplest model for gaining some insights of the complex scenario of membrane formation, in connection with the role of lipid geometry and the predominance of cis lipids in eukaryotic cells. The critical aggregation concentration for the spontaneous formation of vesicles was determined for cis and trans isomers with cis-parinaric acid used as a fluorescent probe and it was found to be similar for both lipids. Vesicle dimensions were investigated by light scattering and electron microscopy, and the type of fatty acid residues influenced the vesicle diameter, with a decrease along the series cis > trans > saturated. Fluorescence measurement of dye release from trans and cis vesicles showed also a different permeability. A picture emerged of the geometrical isomer preference in cells as a process driven by natural selection during the life evolution of different organisms, both in terms of compartment dimensions and membrane functionality.
The thermodynamic parameters for the formation of the free radicals upon electron transfer quenching of the flavin triplet state (3FMN) by tryptophan and tyrosine, ΔFRH and ΔFRV, were obtained in aqueous solution by the application of laser-induced optoacoustic spectroscopy at various temperatures. The ΔFRH and ΔFRV values include the electron transfer and charge separation steps plus the protonation of the FMN anion radical and the deprotonation of the amino-acid cation radical. A linear correlation was found between the ΔFRH and ΔFRV values for each of the amino acids in phosphate buffers of [CH3(CH2)3]4N, Li, NH4, K and Cs. The compensation between ΔFRH and ΔFRV within the salt series, and the independent evaluation of the Gibbs energy for electron transfer ΔETGo afforded the entropy change, ΔFRS, for the reaction, different for the two amino acids. The values of ΔFRH, ΔFRV and ΔFRS in each buffer are mainly determined by the changes in strength and probably number of hydrogen bonds between the reacting partners and water produced along all steps leading to the radicals FMNH· and A·. The ΔFRV values linearly correlate with the tabulated entropy of organization of the water structure for the five cations, ΔSo(cat). The entropy change upon formation of the free radicals, ΔFRS, quantitatively correlated to the ΔFRV value, drives the separation of the ion pair after the electron transfer reaction in the case of highly organizing cations. The ratio X = T ΔFRS/ΔFRV = (55 ± 9) kJ cm−3 for Trp as 3FMN quencher is smaller than X = (83 ± 9) kJ cm−3 for Tyr as quencher. These values are discussed in conjunction with the Marcus reorganization energy, as calculated from the Gibbs activation energy of the electron transfer process, which is independent of the salt present but different for each of the two quenchers.
Absolute rate constants for hydrogen abstraction from 4-methylphenol (para-cresol) by the lowest triplet states of 24 aromatic ketones have been determined in acetonitrile solution at 23°C, and the results combined with previously reported data for roughly a dozen other compounds under identical conditions. The ketones studied include various ring-substituted benzophenones and acetophenones, α,α,α-trifluoroacetophenone and its 4-methoxy analog, 2-benzoylthiophene, 2-acetonaphthone, and various other polycyclic aromatic ketones such as fluorenone, xanthone and thioxanthone, and encompass n,π*, π,π*(CT) and arenoid π,π* lowest triplets with (triplet) reduction potentials (Ered*) varying from about −10 to −38 kcal mol−1. The 4-methylphenoxyl radical is observed as the product of triplet quenching in almost every case, along with the corresponding hemipinacol radical in most instances. Hammett plots for the acetophenones and benzophenones are quite different, but plots of log kQvsEred* reveal a common behavior for most of the compounds studied. The results are consistent with reaction via two mechanisms: a simple electron-transfer mechanism, which applies to the n,π* triplet ketones and those π,π* triplets that possess particularly low reduction potentials, and a coupled electron-/proton-transfer mechanism involving the intermediacy of a hydrogen-bonded exciplex, which applies to the π,π* ketone triplets. Ketones with lowest charge-transfer π,π* states exhibit rate constants that vary only slightly with triplet reduction potential over the full range investigated; this is due to the compensating effect of substituents on triplet state basicity and reduction potential, which both play a role in quenching by the hydrogen-bonded exciplex mechanism. Ketones with arenoid π,π* states exhibit the fall-off in rate constant that is typical of photoinduced electron transfer reactions, but it occurs at a much higher potential than would be normally expected due to the effects of hydrogen-bonding on the rate of electron-transfer within the exciplex.
Total rate constants of decay (kt) as a function of temperature from −45 to 65°C for the compounds 1 and 2 in AN and TFE and 3 and 4 in AN have been determined by fluorescence lifetime measurements. The data have been fit to an equation that assumes that the rate constants of fluorescence (kf) and intersystem crossing (kisc) are temperature independent, that kic = 0 and that the rate constant of reaction (kr) is activated according to the Arrhenius expression. For compounds 1–3, values of kf and kisc were found to be independent of solvent for any given compound, but kr was consistently greater in TFE than AN. For the anisoles 4, the temperature effect was very small, indicating that kr did not compete with kfkisc and suggesting that an activated intersystem crossing was the dominant temperature-dependent process. The kr, A and Ea values obtained for compounds 1–3 were rationalized in terms of their known photochemistry, phototransposition reactions in AN and photoadditions in TFE. The critical reactive intermediate in all cases is a bicycle[3.1.0]hexenyl biradical/zwitterion that is formed in an activated process from S1. This reactive intermediate returns to starting material faster than it rearranges, and therefore an activated internal conversion is a major pathway for deactivation of S1.
The fluorescence quenching of singlet-excited 2,3-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-2-ene (DBO) by 22 phenols and 12 alkylbenzenes has been investigated. Quenching rate constants in acetonitrile are in the range of 108–109 M−1s−1 for phenols and 105–106 M−1s−1 for alkylbenzenes. In contrast to the quenching of triplet-excited benzophenone, no exciplexes are involved, so that a pure hydrogen atom transfer is proposed as quenching mechanism. This is supported by (1) pronounced deuterium isotope effects (kH/kDca 4–6), which were observed for phenols and alkylbenzenes, and (2) a strongly endergonic thermodynamics for charge transfer processes (electron transfer, exciplex formation). In the case of phenols, linear free energy relationships applied, which led to a reaction constant of ρ = −0.40, suggesting a lower electrophilicity of singlet-excited DBO than that of triplet-excited ketones and alkoxyl radicals. The reactivity of singlet-excited DBO exposes statistical, steric, polar and stereoelectronic effects on the hydrogen atom abstraction process in the absence of complications because of competitive exciplex formation.
The trichochromes are a class of small molecules present in pheomelanin (the red melanin) and absent in eumelanin (the black melanin). Herein trichochrome F (TF) and decarboxytrichochrome C (dTC) are examined. Both trichochromes are characterized by a visible absorption band, which is shown to be the result of overlapping transitions of the cis and trans isomers. The temperature dependence of the absorption spectrum of dTC suggests the additional presence of equilibrium between the enol and keto forms of the molecule. These conclusions are supported by ground-state energies of these isomers obtained using a continuum solvation model. Near-infrared emission measurements were not able to detect photoproduction of 1O2, and spin-trapping experiments revealed formation of O2·−. DNA nicking assays also revealed a low level of light-induced aerobic activity of dTC, suggesting a quantum efficiency of at most 5 × 10−6 for the photogeneration of O2·−. These results are consistent with pump-probe optical experiments, which reveal efficient and nearly complete ground-state recovery within a few picoseconds of excitation. Both trichochromes are efficient quenchers of 1O2, exhibiting a bimolecular rate constant comparable with vitamin C. These results suggest that trichochromes could serve a protective role in pheomelanin pigments.
Vertical excitation energies for electronic transitions from the ground state to the first two excited states of phenol, mono- and disubstituted methoxyphenols and methyl-substituted phenols have been characterized with the Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory (TD-DFT), the Complete Active Space Self-Consistent Field method (CASSCF) and the Coupled Cluster with Single and Double Excitations Equation-of-Motion approach (CCSD-EOM) to simulate and interpret experimental ultraviolet absorption spectra. While CASSCF excitation energies for the first two transitions either are grossly overestimated or exhibit a weak correlation with experimental data, both TD-DFT and CCSD-EOM perform very well, reproducing the spectral shifts of both the primary band and secondary band observed upon substitution. The conformational dependence of the calculated excitation energies is generally smaller than the shifts caused by substitution.
The 2,2,2-trifluoroethoxycarbonyl radical, 3b, has been generated by pulsed irradiation of 9-fluorenone oxime 2,2,2-trifluoroethyl oxalate 1b in carbon tetrachloride and acetonitrile solution. It was characterized by time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR) and infrared spectroscopy. The radical has a lifetime in the range of microseconds and can be detected within the rise time of our time-resolved equipment before undergoing recombination or reactions with the solvent. No decarbonylation or decarboxylation was observed. In the presence of oxygen, the radical is quenched to yield the 2,2,2-trifluoroethoxycarbonylperoxy radical 4b, which has again a lifetime in the range of several microseconds. Time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (TREPR) allowed for the detection of a 1 : 1 : 1 triplet of the fluorene-9-iminyl radical 7 at g = 2.0032 and a 1 : 3 : 3 : 1 quartet with additional hyperfine splitting (HFS) due to proton coupling at g = 2.001 for the trifluoroethoxycarbonyl radical 3b. Calculations indicate that alkoxycarbonyl radicals can exist in conformations that are s-trans or s-cis with respect to the R-O-C(O)·dihedral. A comparison of experimental TREPR spectra with simulations indicates that the s-trans conformer is observed in the case of the ethoxycarbonyl radical, 3a. In the case of the trifluorethoxycarbonyl radical, 3b, however, the additional proton HFS observed shows that it is the s-cis conformer that is formed. As calculations give evidence for a fairly high activation enthalpy for s-cis-s-trans interconversion of alkoxycarbonyl radicals, this discrepancy is likely due to differing conformational preferences of the precursor molecules.
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