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Juana Du

Researcher at University of Wisconsin-Madison

Publications -  18
Citations -  3928

Juana Du is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 10 publications receiving 3413 citations. Previous affiliations of Juana Du include Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

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Visible light photocatalysis as a greener approach to photochemical synthesis

TL;DR: Transition metal photocatalysis represents a promising strategy towards the development of practical, scalable industrial processes with great environmental benefits.
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Efficient visible light photocatalysis of [2+2] enone cycloadditions.

TL;DR: It is reported that Ru(bipy)3Cl2 can serve as a visible light photocatalyst for [2+2] enone cycloadditions and the efficiency of this process is extremely high, which allows rapid, high-yielding [2-2] cyclizations to be conducted using incident sunlight as the only source of irradiation.
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A Dual-Catalysis Approach to Enantioselective [2 + 2] Photocycloadditions Using Visible Light

TL;DR: A strategy for eliminating the racemic background reaction in asymmetric [2 + 2] photocycloadditions of α,β-unsaturated ketones to the corresponding cyclobutanes is described by using a dual-catalyst system consisting of a visible light–absorbing transition-metal photocatalyst and a stereocontrolling Lewis acid cocatalyst.
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Crossed intermolecular [2+2] cycloadditions of acyclic enones via visible light photocatalysis.

TL;DR: A diverse range of unsymmetrical tri- and tetrasubstituted cyclobutane structures can be produced in good yields and excellent diastereoselectivities using this new method.
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Photocatalytic Reductive Cyclizations of Enones: Divergent Reactivity of Photogenerated Radical and Radical Anion Intermediates

TL;DR: This reductive coupling method introduces a novel approach to the tin-free generation of β-ketoradicals that react with high diastereoselectivity and with the high functional group compatibility typical of radical cyclization reactions.