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Aromatic amines diazotization

Acidified potassium permanganate efficiently degrades aromatic amines. Diazotization followed by hypophosphorus acid protonation is a method for deamination of aromatic amines, but the procedure is more complex than oxidation. [Pg.164]

The most important reaction of the diazonium salts is the condensation with phenols or aromatic amines to form the intensely coloured azo compounds. The phenol or amine is called the secondary component, and the process of coupling with a diazonium salt is the basis of manufacture of all the azo dyestuffs. The entering azo group goes into the p-position of the benzene ring if this is free, otherwise it takes up the o-position, e.g. diazotized aniline coupled with phenol gives benzeneazophenol. When only half a molecular proportion of nitrous acid is used in the diazotization of an aromatic amine a diazo-amino compound is formed. [Pg.133]

Aromatic Hydrazines. A general synthesis for aryUiydraziaes is via diazotization of aromatic amines, followed by reduction of the resulting diazonium salt (18) ... [Pg.279]

Phloroglucinol is Hsted in the Colourindex as Cl Developer 19. It is particularly valuable in the dyeing of acetate fiber but also has been used as a coupler for azoic colors in viscose, Odon, cotton (qv), rayon, or nylon fibers, or in union fabrics containing these fibers (157). For example, cellulose acetate fabric is treated with an aromatic amine such as (9-dianisidine or a disperse dye such as A-hydroxyphenylazo-2-naphthylamine and the amine diazotizes on the fiber the fabric is then rinsed, freed of excess nitrite, and the azo color is developed in a phloroglucinol bath at pH 5—7. Depending on the diazo precursor used, intense blue to jet-black shades can be obtained with excellent light-, bleach-, and mbfastness. [Pg.384]

Air Monitoring. The atmosphere in work areas is monitored for worker safety. Volatile amines and related compounds can be detected at low concentrations in the air by a number of methods. Suitable methods include chemical, chromatographic, and spectroscopic techniques. For example, the NIOSH Manual of Analytical Methods has methods based on gas chromatography which are suitable for common aromatic and aHphatic amines as well as ethanolamines (67). Aromatic amines which diazotize readily can also be detected photometrically using a treated paper which changes color (68). Other methods based on infrared spectroscopy (69) and mass spectroscopy (70) have also been reported. [Pg.264]

Synthesis. Almost without exception, azo dyes ate made by diazotization of a primary aromatic amine followed by coupling of the resultant diazonium salt with an electron-rich nucleophile. The diazotization reaction is carried out by treating the primary aromatic amine with nitrous acid, normally generated in situ with hydrochloric acid and sodium nitrite. The nitrous acid nitrosates the amine to generate the N-nitroso compound, which tautomerizes to the diazo hydroxide. [Pg.273]

Amine oxides, prepared to protect tertiary amines during methylation and to prevent their protonation in diazotized aminopyridines, can be cleaved by reduction (e.g., SO2/H2O, 1 h, 22°, 63% yield H2/Pd-C, AcOH, AC2O, 7 h, 91% yield Zn/HCl, 30% yield). Photolytic reduction of an aromatic amine oxide has been reported [i.e., 4-nitropyridine A-oxide, 300 nm, (MeO)3PO/CH2Cl2, 15 min, 85-95% yieldl. ... [Pg.375]

Among the reagents that are classified as weak electrophiles, the best studied are the aromatic diazonium ions, which reagents react only with aromatic substrates having strong electron-donor substituents. The products are azo compounds. The aryl diazonium ions are usually generated by diazotization of aromatic amines. The mechanism of diazonium ion formation is discussed more completely in Section 11.2.1 of Part B. [Pg.587]

Primary aromatic amines are first diazotized and then coupled to yield azo dyestuffs [4],... [Pg.224]

Note Note that the diazotization of primary aromatic amines can also be achieved by placing the chromatogram for 3 — 5 min in a twin-trough chamber containing nitrous fumes (fume cupboard ). The fumes are produced in the empty trough of the chamber by addition of 25% hydrochloric acid to a 20% sodium nitrite solution [2, 4], iV-(l-Naphthyl)ethylenediamine can be replaced in the reagent by a- or -naphthol [10, 14], but this reduces the sensitivity of detection [2]. Spray solutions Ila and lib can also be used as dipping solutions. [Pg.225]

Diazotization of aromatic amines in aqueous 70% hydrogen fluoride at 0 °C followed by in situ decomposition of the arenediazonium fluorides has been replaced by diazotization in anhydrous hydrogen fluoride [52, 53] (equation 13)... [Pg.277]

Only equivocal chemical evidence appears to be available for the unsubstituted aminoimidazoles. The failure of 2-aminoimidazole to undergo diazotization was originally interpreted to indicate that it existed in the imino form more recently, the 4-amino analog has been reported to behave as a normal aromatic amine. The infrared spectra of substituted aminoimidazoles of type 192 193 were con-... [Pg.71]

Although the diazotization reaction takes place in acidic solution, it is the free amine that reacts, and not the ammonium salt ArNH3+ X . Even in acidic solution there is a small amount of free amine present, since aromatic amines are relatively weak bases. [Pg.87]

Diazotization and intramolecular coupling of suitable aromatic amines can also be used for the synthesis of 1,2,5-triazocines.12... [Pg.554]

The fact that practically all aromatic amines are readily converted into diazo compounds contributed greatly to Griess s success. The original method (Griess, 1858) by which he diazotized picramic acid (1.1 see Scheme 1-1) consisted of passing nitrous gases, prepared by the reduction of nitric acid with starch or arsenious acid, into an alcoholic solution of the amine. [Pg.2]

Griess (1864a) had already observed that the diazo compounds obtained from primary aromatic amines in acid solution are converted by alkalis into salts of alkalis. The reaction is reversible. The compounds which Hantzsch (1894) termed sjw-diazotates exhibit apparently the same reactions as the diazonium ions into which they are instantaneously transformed by excess of acid. Clearly the reaction depends on an acid-base equilibrium. [Pg.3]

In contrast to the acid, sodium nitrite should not in general be added in excess. Firstly, as far as the ratio of amine to nitrite is concerned, diazotization is practically a quantitative reaction. In consequence, it provides the most important method for determining aromatic amines by titration. Secondly, an excess of nitrous acid exerts a very unfavorable influence on the stability of diazo solutions, as was shown by Gies and Pfeil (1952). Mechanistically the reactions between aromatic diazonium and nitrite ions were investigated more recently by Opgenorth and Rtichardt (1974). They showed that the primary and major reaction is the formation of aryl radicals from the intermediate arenediazonitrite (Ar —N2 —NO2). Details will be discussed in the context of homolytic dediazoniations (Secs. 8.6 and 10.6). [Pg.13]

The diazotization of heteroaromatic amines is basically analogous to that of aromatic amines. Among the five-membered systems the amino-azoles (pyrroles, diazoles, triazoles, tetrazoles, oxazoles, isooxazoles, thia-, selena-, and dithiazoles) have all been diazotized. In general, diazotization in dilute mineral acid is possible, but diazotization in concentrated sulfuric acid (nitrosylsulfuric acid, see Sec. 2.2) or in organic solvents using an ester of nitrous acid (ethyl or isopentyl nitrite) is often preferable. Amino derivatives of aromatic heterocycles without ring nitrogen (furan and thiophene) can also be diazotized. [Pg.16]

A characteristic property of most diazotizations of aminoazoles is the occurrence of a relatively stable transient intermediate (probably the A-nitrosoamine), in contrast with the diazotization of carbocyclic aromatic amines, where A-nitrosoamines have been considered to be unstable intermediates. This problem will be discussed in the context of the mechanism of diazotization in Section 3.4. [Pg.16]

The diazotization of amino derivatives of six-membered heteroaromatic ring systems, particularly that of aminopyridines and aminopyridine oxides, was studied in detail by Kalatzis and coworkers. Diazotization of 3-aminopyridine and its derivatives is similar to that of aromatic amines because of the formation of rather stable diazonium ions. 2- and 4-aminopyridines were considered to resist diazotization or to form mainly the corresponding hydroxy compounds. However, Kalatzis (1967 a) showed that true diazotization of these compounds proceeds in a similar way to that of the aromatic amines in 0,5-4.0 m hydrochloric, sulfuric, or perchloric acid, by mixing the solutions with aqueous sodium nitrite at 0 °C. However, the rapidly formed diazonium ion is hydrolyzed very easily within a few minutes (hydroxy-de-diazonia-tion). The diazonium ion must be used immediately after formation, e. g., for a diazo coupling reaction, or must be stabilized as the diazoate by prompt neutralization (after 45 s) to pH 10-11 with sodium hydroxide-borax buffer. All isomeric aminopyridine-1-oxides can be diazotized in the usual way (Kalatzis and Mastrokalos, 1977). The diazotization of 5-aminopyrimidines results in a complex ring opening and conversion into other heterocyclic systems (see Nemeryuk et al., 1985). [Pg.20]

If relatively basic and nucleophilic aromatic amines are diazotized in nitrosylsul-furic acid, C- instead of TV-nitrosation takes place as shown by Blangey (1938) for 1-naphthylamine, which gave in this system 4-nitroso-l-naphthylamine. A possible mechanistic explanation of Blangey s observation is given in Section 3.2. [Pg.24]

Belyaev et al. (1989) demonstrated that weakly basic aromatic amines which have a low solubility in diazotizing systems can be diazotized smoothly and with excellent yields (>97%) in mixtures of acetic acid and polyphosphoric acid. [Pg.25]

On the other hand, there is at least one case of an aromatic amine without a hydroxy group in the 2-position, namely 1-aminophenazine (2.29) which, after the initial diazotization, is oxidized within minutes by air or additional nitrous acid to the quinone diazide 2.31 (Olson, 1977). [Pg.27]

The basic principle of all diazotizations of aromatic amines with a hydroxy- or a sulfonamido group in the 4-position relative to the amino group involves a deprotonation of the OH or NH group, respectively, after diazotization of the amino group. There is also a case of a deprotonation of a CH group in the 4-position of an aniline derivative, namely in the diazotization of 4-aminophenylmalononitrile (2.41) which, by the sequence of steps shown in Scheme 2-23, yields 3-diazo-6-dicyanomethylene-1,4-cyclohexadienone (2.42), as found by Hartzler (1964). This product can also be represented by a zwitterionic carbanion-diazonium mesomeric structure. [Pg.30]

The so-called transdiazotizations are mechanistically related to the introduction of diazonio groups using sulfonic acid azides. An aromatic diazonium ion forms a triazene (diazoamino compound) with an aromatic amine the triazene tautomerizes and dissociates at the Na-Np bond of the original diazonium ion. This reaction is important for the synthesis of the 4-aminobiphenyl-4,-diazonium ion, which cannot be obtained by direct (mono-)diazotization of 4,4 -diaminobiphenyl (Allan and... [Pg.35]

Schmid (1936 a) was the first to observe a third-order reaction in the diazotization of aromatic amines in the presence of sulfuric acid, and he proposed the kinetic equation of Scheme 3-3. In subsequent work (1936b, 1937 Schmid and Muhr, 1937), he investigated the course of the reaction in dilute hydrochloric or hydrobromic acid, which could be described by incorporating an extra term for the halide ion with only a first-order dependence on (HNO2), as in Scheme 3-4. [Pg.40]

This statement does not mean, however, that the mechanism of diazotization was completely elucidated with that breakthrough. More recently it was possible to test the hypothesis that, in the reaction between the nitrosyl ion and an aromatic amine, a radical cation and the nitric oxide radical (NO ) are first formed by a one-electron transfer from the amine to NO+. Stability considerations imply that such a primary step is feasible, because NO is a stable radical and an aromatic amine will form a radical cation relatively easily, especially if electron-donating substituents are present. As discussed briefly in Section 2.6, Morkovnik et al. (1988) found that the radical cations of 4-dimethylamino- and 4-7V-morpholinoaniline form the corresponding diazonium ions with the nitric oxide radical (Scheme 2-39). [Pg.43]

The rate-determining step in the diazotization of aniline in aqueous perchloric acid below concentrations of 0.05 m (pH >0.7) is the formation of N203. The following A-nitrosation step is faster (rate equation of Scheme 3-12). However, with aromatic amines that are weaker nucleophiles than aniline, e.g. 4-nitroaniline, nitrosation is slower than the formation of N203, and the rate is second-order with respect to nitrous acid and first-order in amine (Scheme 3-13, Larkworthy, 1959). [Pg.45]

On increasing the acidity still further (>0.1 m H2S04, i.e., H0< 1), the rate of diazotization of aniline passes through a minimum and then increases rapidly (region B in Fig. 3-1). The plot in Figure 3-1 is a somewhat schematic representation of the minimum, the position of which depends very much on the concentration of nitrous acid. Moreover, with other aromatic amines the plot is not exactly the same, but it can be explained by analogous arguments. [Pg.46]

The C-nitrosation of aromatic compounds is characterized by similar reaction conditions and mechanisms to those discussed earlier in this section. The reaction is normally carried out in a strongly acidic solution, and in most cases it is the nitrosyl ion which attacks the aromatic ring in the manner of an electrophilic aromatic substitution, i. e., via a a-complex as steady-state intermediate (see review by Williams, 1988, p. 58). We mention C-nitrosation here because it may interfere with diazotization of strongly basic aromatic amines if the reaction is carried out in concentrated sulfuric acid. Little information on such unwanted C-nitrosations of aromatic amines has been published (Blangey, 1938 see Sec. 2.2). [Pg.53]

This type of scheme for the nitrosation of primary aromatic amines was first used by Ridd in 1959. The comparison of the present scheme with that from 1959 demonstrates how much more diversified the knowledge on diazotization mechanisms has become in three decades. [Pg.58]

In the context of the stability of the nitrosoamine intermediate in the diazotization of heteroaromatic amines relative to that in the case of aromatic amines, the reversibility of diazotization has to be considered. To the best of our knowledge the reverse reaction of a diazotization of an aromatic amine has never been observed in acidic solutions. This fact is the basis of the well-known method for the quantitative analysis of aromatic amines by titration with a calibrated solution of sodium nitrite (see Sec. 3.3). With heteroaromatic amines, however, it has been reported several times that, when using amine and sodium nitrite in the stoichiometric ratio 1 1, after completion of the reaction nitrous acid can still be detected with Kl-starch paper,... [Pg.62]

The reversibility of aromatic diazotization in methanol may indicate that the intermediate corresponding to the diazohydroxide (3.9 in Scheme 3-36), i. e., the (Z)-or (is)-diazomethyl ether (Ar — N2 — OCH3), may be the cause of the reversibility. In contrast to the diazohydroxide this compound cannot be stabilized by deprotonation. It can be protonated and then dissociates into a diazonium ion and a methanol molecule. This reaction is relatively slow (Masoud and Ishak, 1988) and therefore the reverse reaction of the diazomethyl ether to the amine may be competitive. Similarly the reversibility of heteroaromatic amine diazotizations with a ring nitrogen in the a-position may be due to the stabilization of the intermediate (Z)-diazohydroxide, hydrogen-bonded to that ring nitrogen (Butler, 1975). However, this explanation is not yet supported by experimental data. [Pg.64]

Primary alkyl amines RNHi can be convertedto alkyl halides by (1) conversion to RNTs2 (p. 447) and treatment of this with I or Br in DMF, or to N(Ts)—NH2 derivatives followed by treatment with NBS under photolysis conditions, (2) diazotization with terr-butyl nitrite and a metal halide such as TiCU in DMF, or (3) the Katritzky pyrylium-pyridinium method (pp. 447,489). Alkyl groups can be cleaved from secondary and tertiary aromatic amines by concentrated HBr in a reaction similar to 10-71, for example,... [Pg.522]

Rearrangement of aryl triazenes can be used to prepare azo derivatives of primary and secondary aromatic amines." These are first diazotized at the amino group (see 11-4) to give triazenes, which are then rearranged by treatment with acid. The rearrangement always gives the para isomer, unless that position is occupied. [Pg.728]


See other pages where Aromatic amines diazotization is mentioned: [Pg.433]    [Pg.433]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.426]    [Pg.427]    [Pg.443]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.463]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.225]    [Pg.230]    [Pg.256]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.635 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.635 ]




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