Diazotazione NaNO2 NaHSO3
Diazotazione NaNO2 NaHSO3
Diazotazione NaNO2 NaHSO3
LETTERS
Tetrahedron Letters 42 (2001) 53675369
Pergamon
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC 29425, USA
Department of Cell and Molecular Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Medical University of South Carolina,
Charleston, SC 29425, USA
AbstractA one-pot deamination of a wide variety of substituted anilines is described. The process involves a diazotizationdediazotization utilizing acetic acid, sodium nitrite, and sodium bisulfite- inexpensive, green reagents. The process occurs quickly
under mild conditions, tolerates sensitive functionality, and gives products in modest-to-good yields (1688%). 2001 Elsevier
Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
Scheme 1.
* Corresponding author.
0040-4039/01/$ - see front matter 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
PII: S 0 0 4 0 - 4 0 3 9 ( 0 1 ) 0 1 0 2 7 - 9
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Table 1.
Bisulfite reduction15
ArNH2
Yield (%)
2-I, 4-CO2CH3
8391
2-I, 5-OCH3
2-I
2
3
72
34
80
16a
82
88
83
73
67
26
2-I, 4-OH
2-CN, 3-Cl
4-CO2CH3
2-F, 4-Cl
3-OCH3
2-I, 4-I, 5-SO3H
RPPG(4-NH2, 3-I)Fc
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Time (h)
1
2
6
20
4
4
4
2
4
4
4
Ethanol reduction14,15
Yield (%)
Time (h)
62
72
64
53
67
0b
69
69
75
0
60
5
18
32
24
24
38
24
24
24
24
24
24
0.5d
Bisulfite is a little known1b reducing agent for diazonium ions that has not been extensively explored.1a,14
Since bisulfite is such a mild reducing agent and the
corresponding acid is a weak acid, we explored the
ability of a mixture of bisulfite and nitrite to effect the
simultaneous diazotization and reductive dediazotization of aryl amines (Scheme 2).
The anilines were dissolved in a solution of ethanol,
water, and acetic acid at 24C and a solution of sodium
nitrite in water was added followed immediately by
addition of aqueous solution of sodium bisulfite. The
reaction was faster (120 h), cleaner, and consistently
gave higher yields of the desired deaminated products
than our previous method (Table 1).
Several features of the process are significant. Starting
materials with functionality ortho to the intermediate
diazonium group (1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 9, and 10), which have
been shown to undergo displacement in other reduction
schemes1, gave good yields of the desired product and
minor amounts of the corresponding ethers. Compound
4 is the exception to this observation, with 16% of the
desired product and 18% of the ether being isolated.
However the corresponding reduction process with ethanol gave only tarry material. Additionally, no halogen-scrambling was detected (replacement of the
diazonium ion with iodine from the deaminated
product), suggesting that if the reaction proceeds via a
radical intermediate, trapping by the hydrogen of the
bisulfite is faster than the reaction with the aryl iodides.
The source of the hydrogen was briefly studied with a
Scheme 2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
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