Issue 12, 1972

Electrophilic substitution in a basic hydrazone system: the first synthesis of N-pyridylhydrazonyl bromides

Abstract

A kinetic study of the bromination of substituted benzaldehyde 3-pyridylhydrazones in 70% acetic acid has shown that the protonated hydrazone species is brominated. In water, both protonated and free hydrazones (the latter 162-fold more rapidly) react with bromine. The products formed are the corresponding N-(3-pyridyl) substituted benzohydrazonyl bromides, rather than N-bromo-complexes, and substituent effects (ρ=–0·42 for C-aryl ring and –1·42 for N-pyridyl ring) are in accord with direct electrophilic attack at methine carbon atom. The novel hydrazonyl bromides (isolated as hydrobromides) may be readily hydrolysed to N-(3-pyridyl) substituted benzohydrazides and react with azide ion to give benzohydrazonyl azides.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1972, 1892-1896

Electrophilic substitution in a basic hydrazone system: the first synthesis of N-pyridylhydrazonyl bromides

A. F. Hegarty, P. J. Moroney, A. Moynihan and F. L. Scott, J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1972, 1892 DOI: 10.1039/P29720001892

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