Barton–Zard reaction

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The Barton–Zard reaction is a route to pyrrole derivatives via the reaction of a nitroalkene with an α-isocyanide under basic conditions.[1] It is named after Derek Barton and Samir Zard who first reported it in 1985.[2]

Mechanism edit

The mechanism consists of five steps:

 

Scope edit

The nitro compound may be aromatic rather than just an alkene.[3] The reaction has been used for the synthesis of polypyrroles, including porphyrins,[4] as well as dipyrromethenes such as BODIPY.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ Jie Jack Li (2013). Heterocyclic Chemistry in Drug Discovery. New York: Wiley. ISBN 9781118354421. pp.43-4
  2. ^ Barton, Derek H. R.; Zard, Samir Z. (1985). "A new synthesis of pyrroles from nitroalkenes". Journal of the Chemical Society, Chemical Communications (16): 1098. doi:10.1039/C39850001098.
  3. ^ Lash, Timothy D.; Novak, Bennett H.; Lin, Yanning (April 1994). "Synthesis of phenanthropyrroles and phenanthrolinopyrroles from isocyanoacetates: An extension of the barton-zard pyrrole condensation". Tetrahedron Letters. 35 (16): 2493–2494. doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(00)77152-8.
  4. ^ Finikova, Olga S.; Cheprakov, Andrei V.; Beletskaya, Irina P.; Carroll, Patrick J.; Vinogradov, Sergei A. (January 2004). "Novel Versatile Synthesis of Substituted Tetrabenzoporphyrins". The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 69 (2): 522–535. doi:10.1021/jo0350054. PMID 14725469.
  5. ^ Ono, Noboru (2008). "Barton-Zard Pyrrole Synthesis and Its Application to Synthesis of Porphyrins, Polypyrroles, and Dipyrromethene Dyes". Heterocycles. 75 (2): 243. doi:10.3987/REV-07-622 (inactive 2024-03-07).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of March 2024 (link)