Meisenheimer complex

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A Meisenheimer complex or Jackson-Meisenheimer complex in organic chemistry is a 1:1 reaction adduct between an arene carrying electron withdrawing groups and nucleophile. These complexes are found as reactive intermediates in nucleophilic aromatic substitution but stable and isolated Meisenheimer salts are also known.[1][2][3]

Contents

[edit] Background

The early development of this type of complex takes place around the turn of the 19th century. In 1886 Janovski observed an intense violet color when he mixed meta-dinitrobenzene with an alcoholic solution of alkali. In 1895 Lobry de Bruyn investigated a red substance formed in the reaction of trinitrobenzene with potassium hydroxide in methanol. In 1900 Jackson and Gazzolo reacted trinitroanisole with sodium methoxide and proposed a quinoid structure for the reaction product.

Scheme 1. The Meisenheimer complex

In 1902 J. Meisenheimer[4] observed that by acidifying their reaction product, the starting material was recovered.

With three electron withdrawing groups, the negative charge in the complex is located at one of the nitro groups according to the quinoid model. When less electron poor arenes this charge is delocalized over the entire ring (structure to the right in scheme 1).

In one study[5] a Meisenheimer arene (4,6-Dinitrobenzofuroxan) was allowed to react with a strongly electron-releasing arene (1,3,5-tris(N-pyrrolidinyl)benzene) forming a zwitterionic Meisenheimer - Wheland complex. The Wheland intermediate is its opposite number and the reactive intermediate in electrophilic aromatic substitution.

Scheme 2 Meisenheimer -Wheland complex

The structure of this complex was conformed by NMR spectroscopy.

[edit] Janovski reaction

The Janovski reaction is the reaction of 1,3-dinitrobenzene with an enolizable ketone to the Meisenheimer adduct.

[edit] Zimmermann reaction

In the Zimmermann reaction the Janovski adduct is oxidized with excess base to a strongly colored enolate with subsequent reduction of the dinitro compound to the aromatic nitro amine.[6] This reaction is the basis of the Zimmermann test used for the detection of Ketosteroids.

Scheme 3. Zimmermann reaction

[edit] References

  1. ^ Some aspects of anionic .sigma.-complexes G. A. Artamkina, M. P. Egorov, I. P. Beletskaya Chem. Rev.; 1982; 82(4); 427-459. Abstract
  2. ^ Rate and equilibrium studies in Jackson-Meisenheimer complexes Francois Terrier Chem. Rev.; 1982; 82(2); 77-152. Abstract
  3. ^ IUPAC Gold Book definition: Link
  4. ^ J. Meisenheimer Liebigs Ann. Chem. 323, 205, 1902
  5. ^ Evidence for Carbon-Carbon Meisenheimer-Wheland Complexes between Superelectrophilic and Supernucleophilic Carbon Reagents Carla Boga, Erminia Del Vecchio, Luciano Forlani, Andrea Mazzanti, Paolo E. Todesco Angewandte Chemie Volume 117, Issue 21 , Pages 3349 - 3353 2005 DOI:10.1002/ange.200500238
  6. ^ Electronic structure of [n.1.1]propellanes. PE (photoelectron) spectroscopic investigationsRolf Gleiter, Karl Heinz Pfeifer, Guenter Szeimies, Johannes Belzner, and Klaus Lehne J. Org. Chem.; 1990; 55(2) pp 636 - 638; DOI:10.1021/jo00289a044