Chemistry of open-shell π-extended azacorannulenes

Open-shell aromatic molecules have garnered attention due to their applications in various fields. Designing such molecules by incorporating non-hexagonal structures or hetero atoms into the π-surface of aromatic molecules is an effective approach. This thesis investigates multiple analogs of open-s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hamamoto, Yosuke
Other Authors: Shingo Ito
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182816
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:Open-shell aromatic molecules have garnered attention due to their applications in various fields. Designing such molecules by incorporating non-hexagonal structures or hetero atoms into the π-surface of aromatic molecules is an effective approach. This thesis investigates multiple analogs of open-shell aromatic molecules based on the azacorannulene skeleton. Chapter 1 provides a general introduction to the development of carbon-centered radical chemistry from the perspective of fragment molecules of carbon-defective graphene, highlighting the significance of organic open-shell molecules. Chapter 2 discusses the synthesis and properties of monoradical molecules, modified by incorporating one carbon into azapentabenzocorannulene, and the isolation of a single crystal of the rare tropyl radical form. Chapter 3 presents open-shell molecules with two sp2 carbons added to azacorannulene, featuring a small singlet-triplet gap and a singlet ground state. Chapter 4 details the synthesis of diazapentabenzocorannulenium cation, which incorporates another nitrogen atom in the central pyrrole ring of the corannulene structure and serves as a potential precursor to diazapentabenzocorannulene radical. This cation molecule itself exhibits high affinity for water despite its large π-surface. These carbon-defective modifications enable the design of functional open-shell molecules. Chapter 5 describes the conclusion and perspective of this research.