Using light to unveil unexplored reactivities of earth-abundant metal-oxygen intermediates is a formidable challenge, given the already remarkable oxidation ability of these species in the ground state. However, the light-induced reactivity of Cu-O intermediates still remains unexplored, due to the photoejection of O under irradiation. Herein, we describe a photoinduced reactivity switch of bioinspired O-activating Cu complexes, based on the archetypal tris(2-pyridyl-methyl)amine () ligand. This report represents a key precedent for light-induced reactivity switch in Cu-O chemistry, obtained by positioning C-H substrates in close proximity of the active site. Open and caged Cu complexes displaying an internal aryl ether substrate were evaluated. Under light, a Cu-O mediated reaction takes place that induces a selective conversion of the internal aryl ether unit to a phenolate-CH- moiety with excellent yields. This light-induced transformation displays high selectivity and allows easy postfunctionalization of -based ligands for straightforward preparation of challenging heteroleptic structures. In the absence of light, O activation results in the standard oxidative cleavage of the covalently attached substrate. A reaction mechanism that supports a monomeric cupric-superoxide-dependent reactivity promoted by light is proposed on the basis of reactivity studies combined with (TD-) DFT calculations.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11134348 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.4c00184 | DOI Listing |
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