posted on 2023-08-04, 19:03authored byKun-You Chung, Zachariah A. Page
Unimolecular (Type I) radical photoinitiators (PIs) have
transformed
the chemical manufacturing industry by enabling (stereo)lithography
for microelectronics and emergent 3D printing technologies. However,
the reliance on high energy UV-violet light (≤420 nm) restricts
the end-use applications. Herein, boron-methylated dipyrromethene
(methylated-BODIPY) is shown to act as a highly efficient Type I radical
PI upon irradiation with low energy green light. Using a low intensity
(∼4 mW/cm2) light emitting diode centered at 530
nm and a low PI concentration (0.3 mol %), acrylic-based resins were
polymerized to maximum conversion in ∼10 s. Under equivalent
conditions (wavelength, intensity, and PI concentration), state-of-the-art
visible light PIs Ivocerin and Irgacure 784 show no appreciable polymerization.
Spectroscopic characterization suggests that homolytic β-scission
at the boron–carbon bond results in radical formation, which
is further facilitated by accessing long-lived triplet excited states
through installment of bromine. Alkylated-BODIPYs represent a new
modular visible light PI platform with exciting potential to enable
next generation manufacturing and biomedical applications where a
spectrally discrete, low energy, and thus benign light source is required.