Sandmeyer reaction
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The Sandmeyer reaction is a chemical reaction used to synthesize aryl halides from aryl diazonium salts.[1][2][3] It is named after the Swiss chemist Traugott Sandmeyer.
An aromatic (or heterocyclic) amine quickly reacts with a nitrite to form an aryl diazonium salt, which decomposes in the presence of copper(I) salts, such as copper(I) chloride, to form the desired aryl halide.[4][5] The reaction is a radical-nucleophilic aromatic substitution.
Several improvements have been made to the standard procedures.[6][7]
[edit] Variations
The majority of variations of the Sandmeyer reactions consist of using various copper salts.[8][9] For example, using cuprous cyanide produces benzonitriles.[10] Substituting thiols or water for the copper salts generates thioethers or phenols, respectively.
The Schiemann reaction uses tetrafluoroborate and delivers the halide-substituted product, fluorobenzene, which is not obtained by the use of copper fluorides.
Sandmeyer reactions with copper salts used in catalytic amounts are also known. One bromination protocol employs a 0.2 equivalent Cu(I)/Cu(II) mixture with additional amounts of the bidentate ligand phenanthroline and phase-transfer catalyst dibenzo-18-crown-6 [11]:
[edit] References
- ^ Traugott Sandmeyer (1884). "Ueber die Ersetzung der Amidgruppe durch Chlor in den aromatischen Substanzen". Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft 17 (3): 1633-1635. doi: .
- ^ Traugott Sandmeyer (1884). "Ueber die Ersetzung der Amid-gruppe durch Chlor, Brom und Cyan in den aromatischen Substanzen". Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft 17 (4): 2650-2653. doi: .
- ^ Ludwig Gattermann (1890). "Untersuchungen über Diazoverbindungen". Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft 17 (1): 1218-1228. doi: .
- ^ J. K. Kochi (1957). "The Mechanism of the Sandmeyer and Meerwein Reactions". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 79 (11): 2942-2948. doi: .
- ^ H. H. Hodgson (1947). "The Sandmeyer Reaction". Chem. Rev. 40 (2): 251-277. doi: .
- ^ M. P. Doyle, B. Siegfried and J. F. Dellaria (1977). "Alkyl nitrite-metal halide deamination reactions. 2. Substitutive deamination of arylamines by alkyl nitrites and copper(II) halides. A direct and remarkably efficient conversion of arylamines to aryl halides". J. Org. Chem. 42 (14): 2426-2431. doi: .
- ^ Suzuki, N. et al. Perkins Trans. I 1987, 645.
- ^ Jonathan L. Hartwell (1955). "o-Chlorobromobenzene". Org. Synth.; Coll. Vol. 3: 185.
- ^ F. D. Gunstone and S. Horwood Tucker (1963). "1-Chloro-2,6-dinitrobenzene". Org. Synth.; Coll. Vol. 4: 160.
- ^ H. T. Clarke and R. R. Read (1941). "o-Tolunitrile and p-Tolunitrile". Org. Synth.; Coll. Vol. 1: 514.
- ^ P. Beletskaya, Alexander S. Sigeev, Alexander S. Peregudov, Pavel V. Petrovskii (2007). "Catalytic Sandmeyer Bromination". Synthesis 2007: 2534-2538. doi: .