Excited-state configuration of nitroarenes enables oxidative cleavage of aromatics over alkenes
Wesley J. Olivier, Piotr T. Błyszczyk, Enrique M. Arpa, Kenshiro Hitoshio, Miguel Gomez‐Mendoza, Víctor A. de la Peña O’Shea, Isabelle Marchand, Thomas Poisson, Alessandro Ruffoni, Daniele Leonori
Abstract
The ozonolytic deconstruction of aromatics remains a challenge in organic chemistry. Ozone preferentially reacts with alkenes over arenes, meaning that once the initial aromatic cleavage occurs, the dearomatized products are inherently more reactive than the starting materials. Consequently, the process cannot be halted, resulting in full oxidation. Addressing this challenge requires subverting intrinsic rules of chemoselectivity to transform a less reactive substrate in the presence of a more reactive one. We demonstrate that this concept can be achieved by using photoexcited nitroarenes. Crucial to the success of this chemoselective process is the use of a nitroarene that is preferentially excitable to a triplet π,π* state over the n,π* state. This switch in excited-state configuration provides an otherwise inaccessible manifold, in which oxidative cleavage is diverted toward aromatics in the presence of alkenes.