Sakai Misato, Fujio Shinya, Imayoshi Ayumi, Sasamori Takahiro, Okada Keita, Imai Yoshitane, Hasegawa Masashi, Tsubaki Kazunori
Graduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Kyoto Prefectural University, 1-5 Hangi-cho, Shimogamo, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto, 606-8522, Japan.
Department of Chemistry, Institute of Pure and Applied Sciences, and, Tsukuba Research Center for Energy Materials Sciences (TREMS), University of Tsukuba, 1-1-1 Tennodai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, 305-8571, Japan.
Chem Asian J. 2024 Aug 1;19(15):e202400159. doi: 10.1002/asia.202400159. Epub 2024 Jul 6.
In this study, compounds with phenylethynyl (PE) groups introduced at all of the possible positions of the methylene-bridged structure of the 1,1'-bi-2-naphthol backbone (3-PE to 8-PE) were synthesized. Compounds with four or six phenylethynyl groups (3,6-PE, 4,6-PE, 5,6-PE, 6,7-PE, and 3,4,6-PE) were also synthesized. The key reaction for the synthesis of these compounds was the Sonogashira reaction using halogen scaffolds. The new transformation methods include (1) selective bromination of the 5-position of the binaphthyl skeleton and (2) bromination of the 6-position and then iodination of the 4-position, followed by the Sonogashira reaction of iodine at the 4-position and lithiation and protonation of bromine at the 6-position. The optical properties of the compounds were evaluated. The extension of the π system greatly differed depending on the position of the phenylethynyl group. 4-PE, 4,6-PE, and 3,4,6-PE, in which the phenylethynyl groups were introduced in the extended direction of the naphthalene linkage axis, showed longer absorption and emission wavelengths and higher fluorescence quantum yields than the other compounds. In circularly polarized luminescence measurements, 7-PE showed a relatively large g value, an interesting finding that reverses the sense.