Abstract
Summary Haloaromatic drug molecules of the amiloride family are plagued by photodegradation with associated toxicity. Herein, we report on the photodegradation of analogs of amiloride, which are known to undergo photosubstitution in water. Model compounds built on the same scaffold undergo clean photosubstitution also in alcoholic solvent, where a certain amount of photodehalogenation is normally expected. Available evidence points to a mechanism starting with photoexcitation followed by photoionization to give a radical cation intermediate. Subsequent substitution reaction with the protic solvent is assisted by a general base, possibly strengthened by the proximal solvated electron. Recombination with the solvated electron generates the observed product. Quantum chemical computations reveal that excited state antiaromaticity is relieved when an electron is ejected from the photoexcited molecule by the second photon. The mechanism indicated here could have wide applicability to photoinduced degradation of similar heteroaromatic compounds in the environment, as well as to a class of increasingly popular synthetic photoredox methods.
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