| Literature DB >> 32350980 |
Yulian Pang1,2, Shuheng Fan2, Qunying Wang1, Dennis Oprych1, Alfred Feilen3, Knut Reiner4, Dietmar Keil4, Yuriy L Slominsky5, Sergey Popov6, Yingquan Zou2, Bernd Strehmel1.
Abstract
Cyanines comprising either a benzo[e]- or benzo[c,d]indolium core facilitate initiation of radical photopolymerization combined with high power NIR-LED prototypes emitting at 805 nm, 860 nm, or 870 nm, while different oxime esters function as radical coinitiators. Radical photopolymerization followed an initiation mechanism based on the participation of excited states, requiring additional thermal energy to overcome an existing intrinsic activation barrier. Heat released by nonradiative deactivation of the sensitizer favored the system, even under conditions where a thermally activated photoinduced electron transfer controls the reaction protocol. The heat generated internally by the NIR sensitizer promotes generation of the initiating reactive radicals. Sensitizers with a barbiturate group at the meso-position preferred to bleach directly, while sensitizers carrying a cyclopentene moiety unexpectedly initiated the photosensitized mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: aromatics; electron transfer; photochemistry; polymers; radicals
Year: 2020 PMID: 32350980 DOI: 10.1002/anie.202004413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336