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Upconversion of Infrared Photons Enables Rapid Organic Synthesis under Sunlight

2023-09-09

A research group led by Prof.WU Kaifeng from the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics(DICP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) has reported the efficient near-infrared photon upconversion sensitized by leadfree semiconductor nanocrystals and demonstrated its novel application in solar synthesis.

The study was published inNature Photonicson February 6.

Upconversion of near-infrared photons to visible photons can boost the performance of photovoltaics,photoredox-catalysis and phototheranostics.Sensitized triplet-fusion is a promising means for photon upconversion.

However, current photosensitizers capable of nearinfrared absorption often contain either precious or toxic elements, for example, palladium- or platinumcomplexes and lead chalcogenide nanocrystals.

In this study, the researchers reported zincdoped CuInSe2nanocrystals as a low-cost and environmentally-benign sensitizer for near-infrared-tovisible upconversion, which achieved external quantum efficiency of 16.7% for this spectral range.

This upconversion system was further merged with photoredox catalysis, enabling reductive dehalogenation,amine oxidation, carbon-oxygen bond formation and photopolymerization efficiently driven by near-infrared photons.

Near-infrared photon upconversion and solar synthesis using lead-free nanocrystals (Image by DU Jun)

More importantly, thanks to the broadband light capturing of the near-infrared nanocrystals, these reactions were remarkably rapid under indoor sunlight,enabling, for example, polymerization of acrylates within just 30 seconds.

“Organic synthesis under sunlight, or solar synthesis,has been a century-long idea, which was pioneered by Ciamicianet al.But organic chemists’vision has been limited to utilizing visible photons in sunlight,”said Prof.WU.“Our study extends the reach of solar synthesis to both visible and near-infrared photons abundant in sunlight, which is poised to strongly boost this technology.”