Abstract
A new straightforward methodology for the synthesis of phosphonium salts integrated with π-conjugated scaffold from phosphine oxides has been developed. It is now possible to obtain cyclic phosphonium salts possessing up to eight conjugated rings and bearing e.g. pyrrole, thiophene, indole or benzofuran scaffolds from abundant and commercially available materials in high yields. An enticing feature of this general strategy is that this one-step procedure typically does not require chromatographical purification. Still greater synthetic possibilities are related to the fact that, even demanding scaffolds such as azulene, pyrene or fluorene can be bridged with the phospholium subunit. Starting from 1,4-dihydropyrrolo[3,2-b]pyrrole, heretofore rarely observed ladder-type bis-phosphonium salts were effectively prepared. The ability to form phosphonium salts possessing such manifold scaffolds translated to diverse photophysical properties ranging from non-fluorescent dyes to thiophene-derivatives emitting quantitatively in the blue region. Geometry change induced by light absorption has a predominant influence on the fate of the molecules’ excited state. Moreover, for the first time it was proven that cyclic tetraarylphosphonium salts migrate through the membrane of living cells to localize in the mitochondria similarly to the well-known triarylphosphonium salts.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
Description
Experimental details; characterization data; NMR spectra and single-crystal X-ray data.
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