15009-91-3Relevant articles and documents
Photoinduced Iron-Catalyzed ipso-Nitration of Aryl Halides via Single-Electron Transfer
Wu, Cunluo,Bian, Qilong,Ding, Tao,Tang, Mingming,Zhang, Wenkai,Xu, Yuanqing,Liu, Baoying,Xu, Hao,Li, Hai-Bei,Fu, Hua
, p. 9561 - 9568 (2021/08/06)
A photoinduced iron-catalyzed ipso-nitration of aryl halides with KNO2 has been developed, in which aryl iodides, bromides, and some of aryl chlorides are feasible. The mechanism investigations show that the in situ formed iron complex by FeSO4, KNO2, and 1,10-phenanthroline acts as the light-harvesting photocatalyst with a longer lifetime of the excited state, and the reaction undergoes a photoinduced single-electron transfer (SET) process. This work represents an example for the photoinduced iron-catalyzed Ullmann-type couplings.
Organocatalytic oxidation of substituted anilines to azoxybenzenes and nitro compounds: Mechanistic studies excluding the involvement of a dioxirane intermediate
Voutyritsa, Errika,Theodorou, Alexis,Kokotou, Maroula G.,Kokotos, Christoforos G.
supporting information, p. 1291 - 1298 (2017/06/06)
An organocatalytic and environmentally friendly approach for the selective oxidation of substituted anilines was developed. Utilizing a 2,2,2-trifluoroacetophenone-mediated oxidation process, substituted anilines can be transformed into azoxybenzenes, while a simple treatment with MeCN and H2O2 leads to the corresponding nitro compounds, providing user-friendly protocols that can be easily scaled up. Various substitution patterns and functional groups were tolerated leading to products in high to excellent yields. Mechanistic studies utilizing HRMS provide clear evidence for the distinct mechanistic intermediates that are involved. This study constitutes an indirect proof excluding the involvement of a dioxirane intermediate in the green organocatalytic oxidation, utilizing 2,2,2-trifluoroacetophenone as the catalyst.
Copper catalyzed ipso-nitration of iodoarenes, bromoarenes and heterocyclic haloarenes under ligand-free conditions
Amal Joseph,Priyadarshini,Lakshmi Kantam,Maheswaran
supporting information; experimental part, p. 1511 - 1513 (2012/03/27)
A catalytic protocol for the conversion of haloarenes into the corresponding nitroarenes is presented using copper salts under ligand-free conditions. The method was effectively utilized for the ipso-nitration of a broad variety of haloarenes that includes iodoarenes, bromoarenes, and heterocyclic haloarenes.