Visible-Light-Driven Organic Photochemical Reactions in the Absence of External Photocatalysts

2019 
Visible-light-driven organic photochemical reactions have attracted substantial attention from the synthetic community. Typically, catalytic quantities of photosensitizers, such as transition metal complexes, organic dyes, or inorganic semiconductors, are necessary to absorb visible light and trigger subsequent organic transformations. Recently, in contrast to these photocatalytic processes, a variety of photocatalyst-free organic photochemical transformations have been exploited for the efficient formation of carbon–carbon and carbon–heteroatom bonds. In addition to not requiring additional photocatalysts, they employ low-energy visible light irradiation, have mild reaction conditions, and enable broad substrate diversity and functional group tolerance. This review will focus on a summary of representative work in this field in terms of different photoexcitation modes. 1 Introduction 2 Visible Light Photoexcitation of a Single Substrate 3 Visible Light Photoexcitation of Reaction Intermediates 4 Visible Light Photoexcitation of EDA Complexes between Substrates 5 Visible Light Photoexcitation of EDA Complexes between Substrates and Reaction Intermediates 6 Visible Light Photoexcitation of Products 7 Conclusion and Outlook
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