Checked by Mark Spaller and Stephen F. Martin.
1. Procedure
4-Dodecylbenzenesulfonyl chlorides. A
250-mL, three-necked, round-bottomed flask, equipped with a
mechanical overhead stirrer, a
Claisen adapter bearing an immersion
thermometer, a
pressure-equalizing addition funnel, and
reflux condenser, is charged with a solution of
60.00 g (0.184 mol) of dodecylbenzenesulfonic acids (Note
1) and
8.64 mL of dimethylformamide (DMF) in
60 mL of hexane
. Stirring is initiated while the mixture is heated to 70°C using a heating mantle, and
22.1 mL (36.24 g, 0.304 mol) of thionyl chloride (Note
2) is added at a rate to maintain controlled reflux (Note
3). The required addition time is about 1 hr. The dark solution is heated an additional 2 hr at 70°C and cooled to 40°C (Note
4). While still warm (

40°C), the mixture is transferred to a
250-mL separatory funnel, and the dark lower layer is separated from the
hexane solution (Note
5). The
hexane layer is cooled to 25°C and washed with
60 mL of aqueous 5% sodium bicarbonate solution (Note
6). The bicarbonate wash is back extracted with
36 mL of hexane and the combined
hexane layers are treated with
3 g of carbon (Note
7), (Note
8) and stirred for 2 hr at 25°C. The
carbon is removed by filtration and the cake is washed with three portions
(12-mL each) of hexane. The combined
hexane layers plus the
hexane washes are used to prepare the azide.
4-Dodecylbenzenesulfonyl azides. A
500-mL, three-necked, round-bottomed flask fitted with a mechanical overhead stirrer is charged with the
hexane solution from step A. To this solution is added a solution of
11.6 g (0.178 mol based on the total solids from the sulfonyl chlorides above) of
sodium azide (NaN
3) in 100 mL of water and
2.0 g of phase transfer catalyst (Aliquat 336) (Note
9). Stirring is initiated, and the reaction progress is monitored by thin layer chromatography (Note
10). Approximately 4 hr at 25°C is required to complete the reaction. The two-phase mixture is transferred to a
500-mL separatory funnel and the aqueous layer is removed. The
hexane layer is washed with
100 mL of aqueous 5% sodium bicarbonate solution and dried over
28 g of anhydrous sodium sulfate. The drying agent is removed by suction filtration, and the cake is washed with
20 mL of hexane. The concentration and purity of the
4-dodecylbenzenesulfonyl azides are best determined by evaporation of a small sample to an oil of constant weight with visible spectrophotometric assay for the azide (Note
11). The
hexane solution of
dodecylbenzenesulfonyl azides, when standardized as above (Note
11), can be used as obtained for most applications. However, if desired,
careful concentration of the hexane solution under reduced pressure at room temperature affords
58.2–61.4 g (
90–95%) of the oily mixture of
dodecylbenzenesulfonyl azides; corrected for the assay of the azides the yield is usually
95% (Note
12) and (Note
13).
2. Notes
1.
Dodecylbenzenesulfonic acids, a 97% mixture of branched chain isomers, was purchased from Spectrum Chemical Mfg. Corp.
4. The progress of the reaction is monitored by thin layer chromatography. A 0.1-mL sample is removed, evaporated to dryness and dissolved in
2 mL of hexane. The solution is spotted on an Analtech silica GF plate (8 cm × 2.5 cm) and developed in
hexane/
methylene chloride (4/1). Visualization by UV light shows R
f = 0.4 for the
sulfonyl chlorides.
5. If allowed to cool to 25°C, the dark layer may solidify, hampering the separation. This very acidic layer is the excess
thionyl chloride/
DMF complex. It should be handled with proper protection in a ventilated area To facilitate visual identification of the layers, the checkers added about
25 mL of hexane.
6. The pH of the bicarbonate wash is a reflection of the efficiency with which the dark lower layer has been removed. In the course of a dozen runs, this pH ranged from 5.5 to 7.1. If the pH of the wash is below 5.5, a second wash with bicarbonate is necessary.
7. Nuchar SA
carbon from Westvaco Co. was used.
8. It is essential that the
carbon treatment be carried out within a few hours. Experiments where this treatment was delayed for 16 hr invariably produced an azide mixture of lower purity (85%) and lower yield (
80%). Although the
sulfonyl chlorides hydrolyze only slightly (1–2%) in wet
hexane in 24 hr, that amount of sulfonic acids in the presence of the phase transfer agent catalyzes the hydrolysis of
sulfonyl chlorides. After treatment with
carbon, the
hexane solution of
sulfonyl chlorides can be stored for several weeks in the refrigerator with little or no adverse effect on the next step.
9.
Aliquat 336 (tri-n-alkylmethylammonium chloride) was obtained from Aldrich Chemical Company, Inc. The material is a mixture of C
8 and C
10 chains with C
8 predominating. There is a slight initial exothermic reaction on adding the phase transfer catalyst. Intermittent cooling with a cold
water bath is required to keep the temperature below 35°C.
10. A sample of the
hexane layer from the reaction mixture is diluted 10 fold with
hexane, spotted and developed as described in (Note
4). Visualization by UV light shows R
f = 0.3 for
sulfonyl azides.
11. The assay for
sulfonyl azides is adapted from the method of Siewinski, et al.
3 The
azide content of the
hexane solution was assayed as follows to determine the contained yield:
1. Standard Curve:
Stock solution: 80 mg of NaN3 diluted to the mark in a 100-mL volumetric flask with 0.1 N NaOH-MeOH.
Procedure: Into a series of four, 100-mL volumetric flasks, transfer 5, 7, 10 and 15 mL respectively of the stock solution. Into a 100-mL volumetric labelled blank, pipet 10 mL of 0.1 N NaOH-MeOH solution. To all add 2 drops of
0.1% ethanolic phenolphthalein indicator solution, and
20 mL of aqueous 1.5% sodium sulfate (Na
2SO
4). Acidify each, in turn, to the
phenolphthalein end point with 1 N
hydrochloric acid and immediately add
25 mL of 1 M ferric ammonium sulfate [Fe(NH
4)(SO
4)
2] solution. Dilute to the mark with 1.5% Na
2SO
4. Let stand 10 min, then read absorbance at 458 nm. Plot absorbance vs. concentration.
2. Sample:
Pipet
5 mL of the hexane solution containing
4-dodecylbenzenesulfonyl azides into a 100-mL volumetric flask and dilute to the mark with
methanol. Pipet 5 mL of this solution into a small stoppered flask. Add
2 mL of aqueous 1 N potassium hydroxide solution and heat at 75°C for

20 min. Allow to cool to room temperature, add 2 drops of
0.1% phenolphthalein solution, and 10 mL of 1.5% Na
2SO
4. Shake, then transfer quantitatively to a
60-mL separatory funnel. Add
10 mL of butanol (or isoamyl alcohol) to the sample flask, shake, then transfer to the separatory funnel. Shake the funnel, let the layers separate, then remove the bottom (
H2O) layer into a 100-mL volumetric flask. Add an additional 10 mL of 1.5% Na
2SO
4 to the alcohol layer in the separatory funnel, shake, let the layers separate, then transfer the water layer to the volumetric flask. Neutralize the combined water layers to the
phenolphthalein end point with 1 N
hydrochloric acid, then immediately add 25 mL of Fe(NH
4)(SO
4)
2. Dilute to the mark with 1.5% Na
2SO
4 solution, let stand 10 min, then read absorbance at 458 nm. Read azide concentration against the NaN
3 calibration curve.
12. The checkers determined the yield by evaporation of the
hexane solution to constant weight (3–10 hr at 0.1 mm). The yields cited are based on the assumption that the 3% impurity in the starting sulfonic acids is not present in the final product. The checkers found the material obtained upon concentration, to be sufficiently pure for use without further purification.
13. The spectroscopic data for the mixture of four isomeric secondary
dodecylbenzenesulfonyl azides (

2.5:1.6:1.6:1.0) is as follows:
1H NMR (400 MHz, CDCl
3) δ: 0.70–1.00 (m, 6 H), 1.00–1.50 (m, 12 H), 1.50–1.80 (m, 6 H), 2.90–2.50 (m, 1H), 7.25–7.45 (m 2 H), 7.87 (m 2 H);
13C NMR (100 MHz, CDCl
3) δ: 12.07, 13.94, 14.02, 14.05, 14.07, 14.10, 20.63, 21.89, 22.50, 22.61, 22.63, 22.65, 22.69, 27.18, 27.48, 27.52, 27.58, 29.15, 29.26, 29.30, 29.32, 29.44, 29.46, 29.49, 29.51, 29.57, 29.61, 29.72, 31.69, 31.82, 31.83, 31.88, 31.91, 36.21, 36.34, 36.60, 36.61, 36.64, 38.06, 38.85, 40.24, 46.11, 46.38, 48.15, 127.55, 127.66, 128.33, 128.93, 129.01, 135.82, 135.85, 154.56, 154.82, 154.87, 156.09; IR (film) 2126 cm
−1.
All toxic materials were disposed of in accordance with "Prudent Practices in the Laboratory"; National Academy Press; Washington, DC, 1995.
3. Discussion
The use and advantages of
4-dodecylbenzenesulfonyl azides as a diazo transfer agent are fully discussed by Hazen, Weinstock, Connell, and Bollinger.
7 In contrast to
p-toluenesulfonyl azide, that has the shock sensitivity of
tetryl (N-methyl-N-2,4,6-tetranitroaniline) and the explosiveness of TNT, the mixture of
4-dodecylbenzenesulfonyl azides exhibits no shock sensitivity at the highest test level (150 kg cm) and 24% of the heat of decomposition measured in cal/g.
p-Toluenesulfonyl azide appears as a diazo transfer agent in
Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. V 1973, 179;
VI, 1988, 389,
414 and its preparation is reported in the first of these. Two explosions during its preparation have been reported.
13,14
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