| Literature DB >> 26899243 |
Mingyue Liu1, Ming-De Li1, Jinqing Huang1, Tianlu Li1, Han Liu1, Xuechen Li1, David Lee Phillips1.
Abstract
Photodeprotection is an important reaction that has been attracting broad interest for use in a variety of applications. Recent advances in ultrafast and vibrational time-resolved spectroscopies can facilitate obtaining data to help unravel the reaction mechanisms involving in the photochemical reactions of interest. The kinetics and reaction mechanisms for the photodeprotection reactions of ketoprofen derivatives containing three different substituents (ibuprofen, Br and I) were investigated by femtosecond transient absorption (fs-TA) and nanosecond time-resolved resonance Raman (ns-TR(3)) spectroscopy methods in phosphate buffered solutions (PBS). Fs-TA allows us to detect the decay kinetics of the triplet species as the key precursor for formation of a carbanion species for three different substituents attached to ketoprofen. To characterize the structural and electronic properties of the corresponding carbanion and triplet intermediates, TR(3) spectroscopic experiments were conducted. The transient spectroscopy work reveals that the different substituents affect the photodecarboxylation reaction to produce carbon dioxide which in turn influences the generation of the carbanion species which determines the rate of the photorelease of the functional groups attached on the ketoprofen parent molecule. The fingerprint TR(3) spectroscopy results suggest that ketoprofen derivatives may be deactivated to produce a triplet carbanion when increasing the atom mass of the halogen atoms.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26899243 PMCID: PMC4761923 DOI: 10.1038/srep21606
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Molecular structures of ketoprofen derivatives.
Figure 2Shown is a proposed mechanism for ketoprofen derivatives deprotection reactions in a phosphate buffered solution.
Figure 3(a)Shown are fs-TA spectra of KP-ibuprofen in a pH = 7.4 PBS/MeCN = 1:1 by volume aqueous solution at early delay time and (b) late delay times excited by 267 nm and probed by a white light continuum. The asterisks (*) marks subtraction artifacts. (c) Shown are the temporal dependences of the transient absorption spectra at 530 nm and 610 nm for KP-iburprofen.
Figure 4(a)Shown are the ns-TR3 spectra of KP-ibuprofen in a PBS/MeCN = 1:1 by volume solution pH = 7.4 obtained with a 266 nm pump excitation wavelength and a 319.9 nm probe wavelength at various delay times that are inserted next to the spectra. (b) Shown is a comparison of the experimental resonance Raman spectrum of KP-ibuprofen obtained in a MeCN/PBS = 1:1 (volume ration) solution at 20 ns delay time (top), the experimental resonance Raman spectrum of the ketoprofen biradical species at a delay time of 80 ns from a previous study (middle); and the DFT calculated normal Raman spectrum for the benzylic biradical (bottom). Dotted lines display the correlation between the experimental and calculated Raman bands. The asterisk (*) marks subtraction artifacts.
Figure 5(a)Shown are the fs-TA spectra of KP-Br in a pH = 7.4 PBS/MeCN = 1:1 by volume aqueous solution at early delay times and (b) later delay times excited by 267 nm light and interrogated by a white light continuum probe pulse and (c) its corresponding temporal dependence of the transient absorption spectrum at 528 nm and 607 nm. (d) Shown are the fs-TA spectra of KP-I in a pH = 7.4 PBS/MeCN = 1:1 by volume aqueous solution at late delay times excited by 267 nm light and interrogated by a white light continuum probe pulse and (e) its corresponding temporal dependence of the transient absorption spectrum at 530 nm and 580 nm. The asterisk (*) marks subtraction artifacts.
Figure 6(a,b) Shown are the ns-TR3 spectra of KP-Br and KP-I obtained in a PBS/MeCN = 1:1 by volume solution pH = 7.4 with a 266 nm pump excitation wavelength and a 319.9 nm probe wavelength at various delay times that are inserted next to the spectra. The asterisk (*) marks subtraction artifacts.