2023

Continuous flow photochemistry and green chemistry

by cyb2025

MARCUS BAUMANN
School of Chemistry, University College Dublin, Science Centre South, Belfield, Ireland

ABSTRACT

The union of continuous flow processing and photochemistry has enabled the effective generation of target molecules of ever-increasing complexity and with growing selectivity. Inherent benefits of flow reactors are thereby exploited for better heat and mass transfer, containment of high energy light as well as scalability irrespective of reactor footprint. This short perspective article evaluates the advances of continuous flow photochemistry towards greener chemical synthesis and highlights remaining challenges that will need to be resolved to meet our sustainability goals.

INTRODUCTION
Performing chemical reactions under photochemical conditions is considered an inherently sustainable means to generate target structures of interest. The ability to trigger a vast variety of transformations photochemically, whereby selectivity arises from finetuning the wavelength and intensity of light, offers great control over a given process. Moreover, photons are seen as traceless reagent equivalents that could replace stoichiometric reagents or act in tandem with bespoke photocatalysts to bring about the green synthesis of drug-like target structures and important chemical building blocks alike (1).

 

Over a century ago, the pioneering work of Ciamician, who is rightly considered as one of the pioneers of synthetic photochemistry, laid the foundations for modern photochemistry by showcasing how many new chemical transformations can be achieved using light. In his 1912 landmark paper on the future of photochemistry, Ciamician outlines how this technology holds the potential to establish chemical synthesis independent of fossil sources of energy and related organic building blocks (2). Despite this vision photochemistry failed in establishing itself as the method of choice for the green synthesis of organic molecules and only recent developments, a century later, have reinvigorated a substantial interest in this field.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Marcus Baumann is Associate Professor for Continuous Flow Chemistry at University College Dublin where his research group focuses on developing new continuous flow technologies for sustainable chemical synthesis including reaction scale-up, photochemistry, and biocatalysis. Marcus graduated from Philipps-University Marburg (2007) and received his PhD from the University of Cambridge (2011) before postdoctoral research at the University of California Irvine (2011–2013) and Durham University (2013–2017). He currently holds an SFI Industry Fellowship intensifying research in modern continuous flow biocatalysis.

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