Over the past decades, photochemical synthesis, i.e. organic synthesis that uses light as source of energy to break and forge bonds, has vehemently re-emerged as an important theme of research in ecosustainable organic chemistry. Thanks to the possibility to excite a precise functional group in a complex reaction mixture and the peculiar reactivity of the so-formed excited states, photochemistry is very attractive for both synthetic researchers and industrial practitioners. An added value to this activation manifold is represented by photocatalysis: in these reactions, the substrate does not absorb light directly, instead low-energy light is absorbed by a purposely added molecule (photocatalyst, PC) that converts this energy into chemical energy for substrate activation, thus limiting undesired processes. This activation step can occur via Single-Electron Transfer (SET), Hydrogen-Atom Transfer (HAT) or Energy Transfer (ET) and in the present thesis I decided to study their application to develop novel ecosustainable synthetic protocols.
Novel Photocatalytic Approaches for Ecosustainable Synthesis
CAPALDO, LUCA
2019
Abstract
Over the past decades, photochemical synthesis, i.e. organic synthesis that uses light as source of energy to break and forge bonds, has vehemently re-emerged as an important theme of research in ecosustainable organic chemistry. Thanks to the possibility to excite a precise functional group in a complex reaction mixture and the peculiar reactivity of the so-formed excited states, photochemistry is very attractive for both synthetic researchers and industrial practitioners. An added value to this activation manifold is represented by photocatalysis: in these reactions, the substrate does not absorb light directly, instead low-energy light is absorbed by a purposely added molecule (photocatalyst, PC) that converts this energy into chemical energy for substrate activation, thus limiting undesired processes. This activation step can occur via Single-Electron Transfer (SET), Hydrogen-Atom Transfer (HAT) or Energy Transfer (ET) and in the present thesis I decided to study their application to develop novel ecosustainable synthetic protocols.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14242/122440
URN:NBN:IT:UNIPV-122440