Redox-controlled shunts in a synthetic chemical reaction cycle

27 January 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Shunts, alternative pathways in chemical reaction networks, are ubiquitous in Nature, enabling adaptability to external and internal stimuli. We introduce a chemical reaction network (CRN) in which the recovery of a Michael-accepting species is driven by oxidation chemistry. Using weak oxidants can enable access to two shunts within this CRN with different kinetics and a reduced number of side reactions compared to the main cycle that is driven by strong oxidants. Further, we introduce a strategy to recycle one of the main products under flow conditions to partially reverse the CRN and control product speciation throughout time. These findings introduce new levels of control over artificial CRNs, driven by redox chemistry, narrowing the gap between synthetic and natural systems.

Keywords

chemical reaction network
chemical reaction cycle
shunt
michael acceptor
systems chemistry
Michael addition

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