Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The reaction of the surface with a solution of diazonium salt in acetonitrile for 2 hours in the dark is a spontaneous process through a free radical mechanism: [42] Diazonium salt application silicon wafer. So far grafting of diazonium salts on metals has been accomplished on iron, cobalt, nickel, platinum, palladium, zinc, copper and gold ...
The tetrafluoroborate can be obtained from crude benzenediazonium chloride by salt metathesis using tetrafluoroboric acid. [C 6 H 5 N 2]Cl + HBF 4 → [C 6 H 5 N 2]BF 4 + HCl. The tetrafluoroborate is more stable than the chloride. [2]
N-(1-Naphthyl)ethylenediamine dihydrochloride is widely used in the quantitative analysis of nitrate and nitrite in water samples by colorimetry.It readily undergoes a diazonium coupling reaction in the presence of nitrite to give a strongly colored azo compound.
The Gomberg–Bachmann reaction, named for the Russian-American chemist Moses Gomberg and the American chemist Werner Emmanuel Bachmann, is an aryl-aryl coupling reaction via a diazonium salt. [1] [2] [3] The arene compound (here benzene) is reacted with a diazonium salt in the presence of a base to provide the biaryl through an intermediate ...
The Meerwein arylation is an organic reaction involving the addition of an aryl diazonium salt (ArN 2 X) to an electron-poor alkene usually supported by a metal salt. [1] The reaction product is an alkylated arene compound. The reaction is named after Hans Meerwein, one of its inventors who first published it in 1939. Meerwein arylation
Another form to synthesize formazans is by the reaction of active methylene compounds with diazonium salts. Diazonium salts add to active methylene compounds to form an intermediate azo compound, followed by the addition of a second diazonium salt (under more alkaline conditions), yielding tetrazene , which then forms a 3-substituted formazan.
[8] [9] The diazotization reaction can be effected with nitrosonium salts such as [NO]SbF 6 without isolation of the diazonium intermediate. [2] As a practical matter, the traditional Balz–Schiemann reaction consumes relatively expensive BF 4-as a source of fluoride. An alternative methodology produces the fluoride salt of the diazonium compound.
The Bamberger triazine synthesis in organic chemistry is a classic organic synthesis of a triazine first reported by Eugen Bamberger in 1892. [1]Bamberger triazine synthesis. The reactants are an aryl diazonium salt obtained from reaction of the corresponding aniline with sodium nitrite and hydrochloric acid and the hydrazone of pyruvic acid.