4.5 Article

Using Donor-Acceptor Stenhouse Adducts to Teach Photochromism in the Undergraduate Laboratory

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL EDUCATION
Volume 98, Issue 5, Pages 1736-1740

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jchemed.0c01434

Keywords

Second-Year Undergraduate; Organic Chemistry; Inquiry-Based Learning; Laboratory Instruction; UV-vis Spectroscopy; Hands-On Learning/Manipulatives

Funding

  1. Cleveland State University through a FIRE Award
  2. USRA grant

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This experiment introduces a straightforward and robust approach for undergraduate students to explore organic photochromism through multistep synthesis, optical characterization, and UV-vis data analysis. Students can isolate and characterize pure products at each stage of the synthesis, while also calculating kinetic parameters based on the collected data. An inquiry-based variant of the experiment is also provided for further exploration and understanding.
There has been dramatic growth in interest and research regarding organic photochromism in recent decades. Despite this, the topic is seldom addressed in the undergraduate chemistry curriculum. Herein, we present a straightforward and robust experiment for the second semester organic chemistry laboratory curriculum which combines multistep synthesis, photochromism, and optical characterization. Over the course of a three-step synthesis, students prepare both the open and closed isomers of a Donor-acceptor Stenhouse adduct. At each stage of the synthesis, the pure products are isolated by filtration and characterized by traditional means (FTIR, H-1 NMR). Additionally, students collect UV-vis data on the photoisomerization process and use this to calculate kinetic parameters. An inquiry-based variant of the experiment is also presented.

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