Issue 0, 1973

Medicinal nitro-compounds. Part I. Photo-rearrangement of N-aryl-2-nitrobenzamides

Abstract

2-Nitrobenzanilide (4a) rearranges to 2-(2-hydroxyphenylazo)benzoic acid (5a) on exposure to light. Azoxybenzene-2-carboxylic acid (6a) is an intermediate in this transformation and also rearranges to the acid (5a) in high yield. Other N-aryl-2-nitrobenzamides (4b–f) afford the analogous azo-compounds (5b–f), but when the N-aryl system carries electron-attracting substituents (4g–j) the compounds are photostable. Irradiation of 2-nitrobenzo-m-toluidide (12) yields a mixture of two isomeric azocarboxylic acids. The scope of the rearrangement has been explored: N-(1-naphthyl)-2-nitrobenzenesulphonamide (18) affords the analogous azobenzenesulphonic acid (19) but N-alkyl- or N-aralkyl-2-nitrobenzamides, N-substituted 4-nitrobenzamides, and NN′-diphenyl-2-nitrobenzamidine (16) do not yield azo- or azoxy-compounds.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1973, 1682-1688

Medicinal nitro-compounds. Part I. Photo-rearrangement of N-aryl-2-nitrobenzamides

B. C. Gunn and M. F. G. Stevens, J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1973, 1682 DOI: 10.1039/P19730001682

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