Balz–Schiemann reaction

The Balz–Schiemann reaction (also called the Schiemann reaction) is a chemical reaction in which a primary aromatic amine is transformed to an aryl fluoride via a diazonium tetrafluoroborate intermediate. This reaction is a traditional route to fluorobenzene and some related derivatives, including 4-fluorobenzoic acid.

Balz-Schiemann reaction
Named after Günther Balz
Günther Schiemann
Reaction type Substitution reaction
Identifiers
Organic Chemistry Portal balz-schiemann-reaction
RSC ontology ID RXNO:0000127

The reaction is conceptually similar to the Sandmeyer reaction, which converts diazonium salts to other aryl halides (ArCl, ArBr). However, while the Sandmeyer reaction involves a copper reagent/catalyst and radical intermediates, the thermal decomposition of the diazonium tetrafluoroborate proceeds without a promoter and is believed to generate highly unstable aryl cations (Ar+), which abstract F from BF4 to give the fluoroarene (ArF), along with boron trifluoride as the byproduct. Also Nitrogen is the by product.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.