Pyrazolo[1,5-a]Pyrimidine: Synthesis and Regiospecific Electrophilic Substitution in the Pyrazole and/or Pyrimidine Rings

1975 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Maurice Lynch ◽  
Misbahul Ain Khan ◽  
Suresh Chandra Sharma ◽  
Huk Chia Teo

A general cyclization route to pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidines from 3-aminopyrazole and 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds is applied to synthesis of the parent ring system. In nitration of this species the orientation of substitution is strongly reagent dependent. Mixed nitric and sulfuric acids yield the 3-nitro compound, whereas nitric acid in acetic anhydride yields the 6-nitro compound. Brominations yield 3-bromo and 3,6-dibromo species.The majority reacting species in the strongly acidic medium is identified as the 1-protonated entity by conjoint use of approximate molecular orbital calculations and the variation of coupling constant patterns accompanying protonation. The molecular orbital calculations predict successive 3- and 6-substitution by electrophiles in pyrazolo[l,5-a]pyrimidine and its conjugate acid, and an addition–elimination sequence is proposed to account for the observed 6-nitration.

1995 ◽  
Vol 48 (12) ◽  
pp. 1969 ◽  
Author(s):  
SD Barker ◽  
K Wilson ◽  
RK Norris

The nitration of α- and β- acylnaphthalenes with copper(II) nitrate in acetic anhydride or nitric acid/acetic acid mixtures gives high yields of the corresponding mononitro compounds. The assignment of constitution to these products is made on the basis of extensive 1H n.m.r. chemicl shift and coupling constant data. In the case of α- acylnaphthalenes, with the notable exception of α- pivalonaphthone, nitration occurs in the α-positions of the unsubstituted ring to give mixtures of 5- and 8-nitro compounds. α- Pivalonaphthone gives appreciable amounts of the 4-nitro compound and also of the 8-nitro compound. This result indicates that the pivaloyl group does not shield the 8-position sterically to any significant extent and is effectively electronically neutral, unlike the other acyl substituents , in allowing attack at the α-position (position 4) of the acylated ring. This result is ascribable to the lack of coplanarity of the pivaloyl group with the naphthalene system. All of the β- acylnaphthalenes gave mixtures of 4-, 5- and 8-nitro derivatives in proportions that did not vary significantly with the nature of the acyl group.


1963 ◽  
Vol 41 (6) ◽  
pp. 1540-1547 ◽  
Author(s):  
Misbahul Ain Khan ◽  
Brian M. Lynch ◽  
Yuk-Yung Hung

Nitrations of 1-phenylpyrazole (I), 1-p-biphenylylpyrazole (II), and 1,5-diphenylpyrazole by "acetyl nitrate" (nitric acid – acetic anhydride) occur selectively in the 4-position of the pyrazole ring, as do brominations of I and II in chloroform solution. These results are in agreement with R. D. Brown's calculations of localization energies for electrophilic substitution in pyrazole.However, nitration of I by mixed acids at 12° yields 1-p-nitrophenylpyrazole, and bromination of I by bromine in concentrated sulphuric acid in the presence of silver sulphate yields 1-p-bromophenylpyrazole.The variations in orientation of substitution can be rationalized if the reacting species of I in strongly acidic solvents is the conjugate acid, in which the pyrazole ring is deactivated by protonation.


1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (24) ◽  
pp. 4073-4083 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Canonne ◽  
Le-Khac Huy ◽  
W. Forst

Common reactivity indices (electron density qr,self-polarizability πrr, frontier electron density fr, superdelocalizability Sr, and localization energy Lr) are calculated for electrophilic substitution in 25 methyl-naphthalenes. An elementary s.c.f. method in the form of a modified ω-technique is used, using the hyperconjugative-heteroatom model for the methyl groups, with ω = 1.4, hx = 2.0, kc–x = 0.8. This choice gives reasonably good ionization potentials and very good correlation for singlet transitions (p-band) in u.v. spectra of α-methylnaphthalenes. Purely static indices qr, fr, and πrr are found to be unsuitable for predicting reactive positions for chloromethylation, while Sr and Lr are very satisfactory. On the theory that the polarizing effect of the approaching reagent is important, the index qr′ = qr + πrr δαr may be obtained, which is also found to be very satisfactory for δαr = β. If the interaction is viewed as an interaction between a hard acid (chloromethyl) and soft base (methylnaphthalenes), the index ΔEr = aqr + bfr is obtained, which is likewise found to be satisfactory with a = 1, b = 0.15. These results show clearly that it is insufficient to base reactivity considerations in methylnaphthalenes entirely on the properties of the isolated substrate molecule, but that even a very simple description of the substrate–reagent interaction is sufficient since the four indices Sr, Lr, qr′ and ΔEr all have the same predictive value.


2006 ◽  
Vol 61 (3) ◽  
pp. 237-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. T. Zeyrek ◽  
A. Elmali ◽  
Y. Elerman

Abstract Reaction of the /i-bis(tridentate) ligand H3L' (L' = 1,3-bis[N-(5-cliloro-2-hydroxybenzylidene)- 2-ainiiioetliylene]-2-(5-cliloro-2-hydroxy!phenyl)iniidazoliduie) with eopper(II) chlonde diliydrate gives the chair-piperazine bridged complex [Cu2(μ-L)Cl2]. The halves of the binuclear complex are related by crystallographic inversion symmetry. The intramolecular Cu ・・・Cu separation is 6.954(3) Å. Temperature-dependent magnetic susceptibility measurements of the complex show a weak intramolecular antiferromagnetic eouphng. The super-exchange coupling constant (J) is - 10.5 cm-1. Semi-empirical extended Huckel molecular orbital (EHMO) calculations have been performed in order to gain msight into the molecular orbitals that participate in the super-exchange pathway.


1995 ◽  
Vol 73 (10) ◽  
pp. 1627-1638 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale R. Cameron ◽  
Alison M.P. Borrajo ◽  
Gregory R.J. Thatcher ◽  
Brian M. Bennett

The rearrangement of organic thionitrate to sulfenyl nitrite potentially mediates the release of nitric oxide from organic nitrates, such as nitroglycerin, in the presence of thiol. The biological activity of these nitrovasodilators is proposed to result from release of nitric oxide in vivo. The thionitrate rearrangement bears analogy to the rearrangement of peroxynitrous acid to nitric acid, which has been proposed to mediate the biological toxicity of nitric oxide and superoxide. In this paper, the two concerted rearrangement processes and competing homolytic reactions are explored using molecular orbital calculations at levels up to MP4SDQ/6-31G*//MP2/6-31G*. Examination of structure and energy for all conformers and isomers of RSONO2 (R = H, Me), models for organic thionitrates and their isomers, demonstrates that structures corresponding to thionitrates and sulfenyl nitrates are of similar energy. Free energies of reaction for homolysis of these compounds are low (ΔG0 < 19 kcal/mol), whereas the barrier for concerted rearrangement is large (ΔG≠(aq.) = 56 kcal/mol). The larger barrier for concerted rearrangement of peroxynitrous acid to nitric acid (ΔG≠(aq.) = 60 kcal/mol) again compares unfavourably with homolysis (ΔG0 < 11 kcal/mol for homolysis to NO2 or •NO). The transition state structures, confirmed by normal mode and intrinsic reaction coordinate analysis, indicate that considerable structural reorganization is required for concerted rearrangement of the ground state species. These results suggest that concerted rearrangement is not likely to be a viable step in either biological process. However, rearrangement via homolysis and radical recombination may provide an energetically accessible pathway for peroxynitrous acid rearrangement to nitric acid and rearrangement of thionitrate to sulfenyl nitrite. In this case, NO2 will be a primary product of both reactions. Keywords: thionitrate, nitric oxide, peroxynitrite, nitrovasodilator, nitrate.


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (7) ◽  
pp. 1051-1062 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saul Wolfe ◽  
B. Mario Pinto ◽  
Vikram Varma ◽  
Ronald Y. N. Leung

The magnitude of a one-bond C–H coupling constant depends upon the chemical environment of the hydrogen atom and, especially, upon its stereochemical relationship to vicinal lone electron pairs. However, a lone electron pair is not essential for the observation of a stereoelectronic effect, since even cyclohexane exhibits different axial and equatorial C–H coupling constants. We propose the name "Perlin Effect" to describe such observations. An analysis of the extensive experimental data regarding the Perlin Effect reveals that, in cyclohexane and in six-membered rings having one or more heteroatoms of the first row attached to the carbon of interest, 1JC–H is always larger for an equatorial hydrogen than for an axial hydrogen. The magnitude of the Perlin Effect is reduced when the carbon carrying the hydrogen of interest is attached to first row and second row atoms or heteroatoms, and it reverses when the carbon atom carries two heteroatoms from below the first row.The existence of the Perlin Effect in nuclear magnetic resonance spectra is reminiscent of an infrared effect known as the Bohlmann bands, whose origin has previously been explained by quantitative perturbational molecular orbital (PMO) theory in terms of the effects of lone electron pairs upon the lengths and strengths and, therefore, the chemical reactivities of vicinal C—H bonds. Since the magnitude of a one-bond C–H coupling constant is expected to vary inversely with bond length, the origins of the Perlin Effect and of the Bohlmann bands would seem to be the same, i.e., the longer (weaker) C—H bond has the smaller one-bond coupling constant. This expectation has now been confirmed: for 25 molecules, representing a total of 35 different kinds of C—H bonds, the bond lengths, stretching force constants, and charge distributions have been determined from fully optimized 6-31G* molecular orbital calculations. In nine of ten cases for which experimental data exist for pairs of diastereomeric or diastereotopic hydrogens, the shorter C—H bond of the pair has the larger coupling constant; in the tenth case, the experimental difference is only 1–2 Hz. Moreover, a global analysis of the data in terms of the equation J = A + BqCqH + C/r, where J is an experimental coupling constant, q is a total atomic charge, and r is a C—H bond length, correlates 23 different types of C—H bonds linearly with a correlation coefficient of 0.915. The C parameter is the leading term of the correlation. Among the systems studied theoretically are eight molecules of the type CH3CHXY (Y = OH, SH; X = F, Cl, OH, SH), which are representative of systems containing both endocyclic and exocyclic first row and second row anomeric effects. The exocyclic effect is found to be very similar for first row and second row substituents, but the endocyclic effect is larger for the first row substituent. Both findings agree with experimental data in solution. Finally, quantitative PMO analysis has been employed to analyse the origins of the different C—H bond lengths in the various molecules of the study. Keywords: anomeric effect, PMO analysis, NMR, stereochemistry, molecular orbital calculations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 140 (11) ◽  
pp. 529-533
Author(s):  
Pasika Temeepresertkij ◽  
Saranya Yenchit ◽  
Michio Iwaoka ◽  
Satoru Iwamori

Author(s):  
Neelottama Kushwaha ◽  
C S Sharma

: Triazine is the six-membered heterocyclic ring containing three nitrogen which replaces carbon-hydrogen unit in the benzene ring. Based on nitrogen position present in the ring system, it is categorized in three isomeric forms i.e.1, 2, 3-triazine (vicinal triazine), 1, 2, 4-triazine (asymmetrical triazine or isotriazine) and 1, 3, 5-triazine (symmetrical or s-triazine or cyanidine). Triazines have weakly basic property. Its isomers have much weaker resonance energy than benzene structure, so nucleophilic substitution reactions are more preferred than electrophilic substitution reactions. Triazine isomers and their derivatives are known to play important roles possessing various activities in medicinal and agricultural fields such as anti-cancer, antiviral, fungicidal, insecticidal, bactericidal, herbicidal, antimalarial and antimicrobial agents.


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