Issue 9, 1988

The reaction of ortho-substituted aromatic azides with boron trichloride or trifluoride

Abstract

The reaction of boron trichloride or trifuoride with ortho-aryl, -diazoaryl, and -arylazoaryl phenyl azides in benzene at room temperature generally gives fused azoles in high yields. Treatment of 2-nitrophenyl azide with boron trichloride mainly affords chlorinated nitroanilines, whereas with boron trifluoride it gives N-o-nitrophenylaniline. In aromatic solvents at 60 °C in the presence of boron trifluoride–diethyl ether, 2-azidobiphenyl forms carbazole and 2-(arylamino)biphenyls, the formation of which depends greatly upon the nucleophilicity of the solvent used; however, its pseudo-first-order decomposition rate is slightly greater in benzene than in toluene or m-xylene. Under the same conditions, phenylazide forms diarylamines.

The results suggest that singlet nitrenium ions, arising from the corresponding azide–trihalogenoborane complexes by loss of molecular nitrogen, are generally the reactive intermediates.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1988, 2615-2620

The reaction of ortho-substituted aromatic azides with boron trichloride or trifluoride

P. Spagnolo and P. Zanirato, J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1988, 2615 DOI: 10.1039/P19880002615

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