Both photolysis and flash vacuum pyrolysis (FVP) of tetrazoles (/) are known to generate nitrile imines (, , and ), which rearrange to 1-diazirines, imidoylnitrenes, and carbodiimides. Moreover, FVP of 5-aryltetrazoles is a convenient source of aryldiazo compounds (/) and arylcarbenes, including pyridylcarbenes. The factors that determine which path is followed are poorly understood. Calculations at the density functional theory and CASPT2 levels now examine cyclization of -phenylnitrile imine to indazole . A corresponding cyclization of -phenylnitrile imine can also lead to indazole, but this reaction, which passes through a carbenic nitrile imine, requires a much higher activation energy and is therefore not competitive with the known rearrangements to phenyldiazirines, ring expansion to diazenylcycloheptatetraene, or a new, potential rearrangement to cyanoazepine. -(2-Pyridyl)nitrile imine is predicted to undergo a new rearrangement to cyanopyridine -imide with an activation energy of 43 kcal/mol. The experimental observation that 2-pyridyldiazomethane is actually formed requires a reaction with an energy barrier below 43 kcal/mol. This is found in the H-transfer from the tetrazole ring in 5-(2-pyridyl)tetrazole to the pyridine ring with a subsequent formation of 1-2-(diazomethylene)pyridine and elimination of N with a barrier of ca. 26 kcal/mol. This new, facile mechanism has not previously been considered.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.0c00773 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!