Intramolecular Axial Ligation of Zinc Porphyrin Cores with Tri...

Collect this paper and discover other ones on Labmeeting. Learn more.
- Hide Abstract
Stable ligation: A series of dendritic porphyrins, such as that depicted in which benzyl ether dendrons were linked to a porphyrin core through 1,2,3-triazole links, was synthesized. Absorption and fluorescence spectra showed a stable axial ligation at the zinc center of the porphyrin core by triazole links in dendritic wedges and indicated that the position of the triazole links strongly affected the stability of the axial ligation within the dendrimer.A series of dendritic porphyrins 7-9 and 12, in which benzyl ether dendrons were linked to a porphyrin core through 1,2,3-triazole links, were synthesized by Cu(I)-catalyzed cycloaddition of azides and alkynes. Absorption and fluorescence spectra showed a stable axial ligation at the zinc center of the porphyrin core by triazole links in dendritic wedges and indicated that the position of the triazole links strongly affected the stability of the axial ligation within the dendrimer. When the porphyrin core was surrounded by aryl ether dendrons having anionic termini and triazole linkers, a significant rate enhancement for photoinduced electron transfer was observed compared with a similar water-soluble dendritic zinc porphyrin lacking triazole linkers. These triazole links constituted a direct pathway within the dendrimer architecture for electron transfer between the zinc porphyrin core and peripheral electron acceptors.
Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) 15(11):2617-24, 2009 Mar 2Who cited this? | PubMed ID: 19185040 | Fulltext


+ Click Here for Related Papers


Join Labmeeting

  • Organize and search your PDF collection
  • Collect papers
  • Search millions of papers
  • Keep up to date with paper alerts
  • Read your papers from anywhere
  • Recommend papers to colleagues
  • Manage your lab

Join Labmeeting

Labmeeting is a web service for researchers. Sign up with your academic email address.

Individuals or corporations not affiliated with an academic institution can request a trial subscription.


Got a question?
The Labmeeting Network
has the answer.
Ask scientists at top universities like Harvard, Stanford, and MIT for their expert opinion!