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Elsevier, Tetrahedron, 25(69), p. 5079-5085

DOI: 10.1016/j.tet.2013.04.091

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An unexpected copper catalyzed ‘reduction’ of an arylazide to amine through the formation of a nitrene intermediate

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Azido nitrobenzoxadiazole (NBD) was observed to undergo a ‘reduction’ reaction in the absence of an obvious reducing agent, leading to amine formation. In the presence of an excess amount of DMSO, a sulfoxide conjugate was also formed. The ratio of these two products was both temperature- and solvent-dependent, with the addition of water significantly enhancing the ratio of the ‘reduction’ product. Two intermediates of the azido-NBD reaction in DMSO were trapped and characterized by low-temperature EPR spectroscopy. One was an organic free radical (S=1/2) and another was a triplet nitrene (S=1) species. A mechanism was proposed based on the characterized free radical and triplet intermediates.